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This digital document is a journal article from Resources,
Conservation & Recycling, published by Elsevier in 2004. The
article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your
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Description:
Crumb rubber can be produced from scrap tires in a wide range of
particle sizes and quality levels. Ideally, the revenue stream
includes tipping fees paid to receive the raw materials; sales of
variously-sized crumb products to different end-user markets; and
potential sales of scrap metal and fiber contained within the
tires. General demand has been increasing, and submarkets for crumb
products are growing in size and variety. However, the optimistic
expectations of potential investors and government agencies
contrast sharply with the experiences of many current and former
producers. Production planning and operation is complex,
real-dollar crumb prices have fallen, and many producers recount
difficulties finding stable markets and competing against newer,
state-subsidized competitors. This paper examines the engineering
economics of crumb rubber facilities. Following a literature review
and interviews with producers, a financial model of a nominal
processing operation was created to aid the analysis of different
market, crumb size, and production scenarios. The profitability of
a crumb facility appears to be particularly sensitive to crumb
rubber prices, operating costs, and raw material availability.
Better analysis of market and production impacts on financial
viability for proposed processing facilities would aid overall
market efficiency.