@ponhazan That's exactly what I thought, this process is not efficient or effective. Burning everything and extracting the glass to return to the glass industry would be more profitable and less energy polluting.
Recycling the solar panels was even more labor intensive than I thought it would be - sandblasting each one by hand? Wow, and still, I'm glad it's being done. We should be thoughtful and take the time to dismantle and reuse what we build.
It can be done like this in small scale recycling but there are machines that can do this, they heat up the solar panel en seperate the electronic layer with the silicon and silver and the intact glass sheet as a whole for recyling as glass for new solar panels.
And the fact that 2 guys had to carry it across the floor, one-by-one, for greater than one camera shot is probably a large bottleneck and waste of manpower. Instead, just put the sandblasting rig at the end of the de-framing conveyor and put a motor arm controlling the blaster nozzle. I dont think the purpose of this facility was to be efficient, which brings up a ton of healthcare concerns for these "artisanal glass recyclers".
@@TheZoneTakesYou The 4:10 plastic cap removal is even more shocking. What's the down time between batches? Anyway, I think this is whole thing is more for the sake of creating job more than anything. Anything of useful get produced in the end is just a bonus.
I LOVE this channel. So well made, no AI voice, just showing how Japanese culture does this or that task. It feels like no matter how simple the task the Japanese people turn it into an art form.
"I LOVE this channel. It's so well made, with no AI voice-just pure Japanese culture showing how tasks are done. It feels like no matter how simple the task, Japanese people turn it into an art form. What inspired you to focus on showcasing Japanese culture in such a detailed and artistic way?"
А мне понравилось, как японские рабочие глядят не защищёнными глазами в летающую вокруг стеклянную пыль. Интересно, иски к хозяевам производства уже были за потерю зрения?
ISA TALAGA SA GUSTO KO, ITONG JAPAN. DAHIL VERY QUALITY ANG MGA GAWA. MULA NOON HANGGANG NGAYUN. AT SUBRANG HIGH-TECH. AT PURO MATITIBAY BASTA GAWANG JAPAN💪 SHOUT OUT FROM PHILIPPINES 🇵🇭
Fascinating, great documentary. The dust generated during this entire process is just insane - literally ! I'd have thought they would have found a way for the dust not to fly around so much. Suction, moisture, anything. As it is, I wonder why the workers are not wearing airtight eye protection as well.
why do you say that? It's about the same as making glass from sand (silicon dioxide). making portland cement or steel requires *much* more time at *much* higher temperatures. Making aluminum from bauxite (aluminum ore) is more energy intensive that any of those. As an industrial process it seems pretty calm -- far from *staggering*
It's crazy to me they allow allow that much glass dust to be generated around workers. Should be totally a wet process until right before it goes in the furnace.
The workers have above grade masks, and with proper air flow in the buildings, the dust is AWAY from them. At least, that is how I would have designed it, and I expect they have better minds than me doing it :p Air flow is often an under utilised procedure, but it's utilised in MANY industries, especially in food preperation and hazardous industries. I SERIOUSLY doubt they hadn't mitigated that...
This seems like an incredible lot of labor, energy, processes to create something I can't imagine they could sell for a quarter of the cost it takes to make. We already have tones and tones of cement been poured with rocks all around the country. Couldn't you just break up the glass bottles and mix them in with normal cement ?
cement formation requires porous aggregate for the silicate sludge to fill in and dehydrate to harden. Cant really fill in a bunch of smooth glass shards, and they would make it easier for the greater structure to pull apart around those glass fragments.
Waste glass of this quality has a value between 10 to -50 dollars per ton (yes, negative). Foamed stone has a value of 50+ dollars per ton. I doubt they're printing money, but this is probably a more profitable enterprise. Processing the glass they have into concrete aggregate would top out at somewhere near 10 dollars a ton and demand would be tempered by the fact that you can't use more than 20% recycled glass in general purpose concrete without compromising on specs.
Japan as a country and its society never cease to amaze me. Although total perfection does not exist, they are a clear example of being diligent cultivators and indicators that one can be on the path to it with intelligent perseverance and example. Magnificent video, discounting this my subscription and admiration for Japan and its people.
I was wondering about that as well. Maybe stone quarries are not as common in Japan as they are in other countries for some reason? Even then, you would think shipping it in on bulk cargo ships would still be cheaper than this. I'm guessing there is some sort of government subsidy for re-purposing what would otherwise be waste in a landfill that makes the financial case work.
@@ottopartz1 There are massive land reclamation projects in Japan, in Tokyo Bay for example; crushed glass (AKA sand) would be as good a fill as anything without the waste of effort and energy of processing it into rock.
@@soundsoflife9549 except this kind of glass is too low quality for recycling into normal glass, obviously, also, when some industrial throws millions at making a factory, you can assume there is a market, a need, and it all make sense. What doesnt make any sense is random youtubers questionning the validity of existing business which are obviously running.
Япония привет! Идея утилизации стеклянного лома очень хороша. Ставлю высшую оценку. У нас это «5+». Людей очень жалко, которые работают со стеклянной шихтой (пудрой). Берегите людей!😢
@@pashamix не в этом дело. Производство похоже на показательное, объемы малы, ручной труд, много перевалок. Особенно панели. Так проблему мусора не решить, ибо дешевле пену делать из первичного стекла.
япония импортирует ВСЁ сырьё и топливо, что потребляет. Всё горючее сжигает на мусоросжигательных заводах, превращая в тепло и электричество, а не горючее - перерабатывает во вторсырьё на второй круг или стройматериалы. В том числе и на расширение своей территории на искусственных островах. И в любом случае это обходится дешевле, чем покупать чистое сырьё из-за бугра, а отходы гноить в земле, которой и так не много. Странам с огромными территориями и "бесконечными" ресурсами это не понять
На счет объемов - мы не знаем, так как накопительный склад ничего не показывает - может там партия биг-бегов накапливается только для погрузки в фуру. Что касается ручного труда и перегрузок - то не больше чем на любом ГОКе, или производстве, например, силикатного кирпича - процессы похожи.
The glass bottles are not considered "waste" they are a recyclable product that can be recycled indefinitely, instead they have taken that resource and killed the recycling of it.
I am obviously missing something here , rocks get crushed to get silica to make glass , then crush glass to make rocks , instead of melting it into more glass , and using the crushed rock to make , well rock .
This is just what they do with the poorer quality glass recycling. Whole bottles/jars are easier to wash the labels off, remove metal, plastic and cork bits, and safer for humans to interact with. This is the broken stuff the sieve out. All part of the flow of the material life cycle!
I also had the impression that brown and green glass could not be recycled. Now I know that they can be recycled, but only into either brown or green glass. Some materials are not recyclable, such as special glass like mirrors because it contains metal, and other. I wonder if template glass is recyclable or not. But I see a tremendous amount of bottles that are thrown into the ordinary garbage. What a waste!!!
Yeah, that's what I was thinking. In Europe we call this stuff foam glass. But only the lowest qualities of cullet would be used for this. Cullet with a high amount of ceramics, stones and porcelain should be used for making foam glass. It is really a waste to make foam glass from those good glass qualities ...
@@SmoothCriminalxD glass is not toxic, it seems an energy hungry process, we know it's not economically viable, so it must be the government arbitrarily funding this with taxpayers money. So what is the rationale here? Saving the planet?
Les panneaux solaires et les éoliennes sont déjà dans les DÉCHETS alors que ces choses n'ont pas 20 ans !!!! Le " RECYCLAGE " d'un panneau solaire coûte très certainement trois fois plus cher que sa fabrication !😢😢 Comme pour beaucoup d'autres objects de notre nouvelle société. Elle est belle cette civilisation écologique.
What a difference between the Japanese industry and other Asian / Indian work practices and attitudes. See how health and safety protocols are adhered to for staff - the cleanliness of the work area, the maintained machinery & tools. In this factory working attitudes and practises is spot on.
No stupid music, or crappy ai voice overs, clean video and subtitles for the info. A + for this vs others i have seen. Keep it up! Good work. Others should take notes on how to make clean videos like this
Безумно дорогой процесс! А не проще ли отходы не сильно измельченные просто добавлять в бетонные недорогие конструкции. Например дорожного покрытия. Или в пенобетон.
а еще эта хрень очень легкая, как пенопласт. пыли от нее пиздец. используют например для засыпки к примеру "крыши" подземного паркинга, на которой потом будет внутренний двор.
@@nrt8305 это когда гравий под ногами есть или в ближайшем карьере. А если его необходимо импортировать с других стран, где одна логистика съедает львиную долю расходов, а при этом есть излишки стекломатериалов, вполне рентабельно пробовать новые рецепты
I think it's spectacular. I didn't know that. Thanks for the video. I'm a stonemason and I do different crafts with stone. I subscribe to your channel. Greetings from Barcelona.
I really like the recycled expanded stone. So many potential applications. I would have expected the process would be able to include the paper and alloy contaminates though. I hope this is a new or emerging process as it seems very slow and inefficient. So much double and triple handling.
Dust collectors must be added. Glass dust is about 50% as dangerous as asbestos dust. The cheap facemasks on the drivers will be only 30% functional. We saw this problem decades ago in California, at various similar mining and re-processing centers. Dangerous work.
Anche usarla produce polvere di silicio. Se si usasse solo incapsulata in altri materiali sarebbe sicura ma non come ciottoli da giardino. Anche solo camminandoci si produce polvere che si inala
Thank you for caring about the planet ❤❤❤. It feels good to see action from waste. The usa is so messed up. It's not mandatory to recycle in most states. 😢😢😢. I live in one of those states. The state I live in doesn't participate in the buy back recycle of bottles. But where I am originally from, nyc, they buy back bottles and part of nyc have recycle pickup. American government is even guilty of shipping garbage to places like Africa 😢 and dumping in the ocean 😢. Something like this would be really helpful and employ so many people.
@@黃乃宣 на Байкале недавно обнаружили плавающее мусорное пятно. народы мира должны раскритиковать руководство России за то, что она так относится к самому большому запасу пресной воды всего человечества, но все молчат
Будет сенсацией если скажу, что в Армении в конце 70-их выпустили брюки из каменной нити, которым не было износа. Сам им пользовался, а когда призвали в армию подарил брюки другу автомеханику, который долго их носил.
it also seems like they absolutely hate safety regulations and are actively breaking all of them, you can even see some of them take off their respirators so they can take in large gulps of the air
こーゆー動画を見ると分別、リサイクル大切。って実感する。後で子供ともう一度みます
@ponhazan That's exactly what I thought, this process is not efficient or effective. Burning everything and extracting the glass to return to the glass industry would be more profitable and less energy polluting.
@ponhazan
なるほど!確かに指摘された通りかもしれないです。。必ずしもプラスに働いているかはわからないし何でもかんでもリサイクルすればいい。という事が果たして正解なのか?んー。難しい問題ですねぇ。私の思いは安直だったことはわかりました!
@ponhazan❤ 神神は言った: コーランで
💓『 人びとよ。あなたがた、またあなたがた以前の者を創られた主に仕えなさい。恐らくあなたがたは(悪魔に対し)その身を守るであろう。」(聖クルアーン 2:21)
❤(かれは)あなたがたのために大地を臥所とし、また大空を天蓋とされ、天から雨を降らせ、あなたがたのために糧として種々の果実を実らせられる方である。だからあなたがたは(真理を)知った上は、(唯一なる)アッラーの外に同じような神があるなどと唱えてはならない。」(聖クルアーン 2:22)
💓 もしあなたがたが、わがしもべ(ムハンマド)に下した啓示を疑うならば、それに類する1章〔スーラ〕でも作ってみなさい。もしあなたがたが正しければ、アッラー以外のあなたがたの証人を呼んでみなさい。」(聖クルアーン 2:23)
❤ もしあなたがたが出来ないならば、いや、出来るはずもないのだが、それならば、人間と石を燃料とする地獄の業火を恐れなさい。それは不信心者のために用意されている。」(聖クルアーン 2:24)
💓 信仰して善行に勤しむ者たちには、かれらのために、川が下を流れる楽園に就いての吉報を伝えなさい。かれらはそこで、糧の果実を与えられる度に、「これはわたしたちが以前に与えられた物だ。」と言う。かれらには、それ程似たものが授けられる。また純潔な配偶者を授けられ、永遠にその中に住むのである。」(聖クルアーン 2:25)』
@ponhazan そのコメントはリサイクル事業を行う企業(こっこー、或いは他の企業全般)に対しての意見なのか?それとも、* SaoRi*個人または他の視聴者らに向けた意見なのか?
這工廠效率很差.
日本的垃圾分類落後台灣20年..日本在制定垃圾分類法律時就已落後(於)世界的回收加工流程.浪費大量民眾的時間在(很多)不該做的垃圾分類工作上..官僚的腐敗愚鈍不知世界走到哪裡了......日本開始垃圾分類台北市已走上垃圾不落地......差異巨大難怪日本要消失34年.....
Recycling the solar panels was even more labor intensive than I thought it would be - sandblasting each one by hand? Wow, and still, I'm glad it's being done. We should be thoughtful and take the time to dismantle and reuse what we build.
It's only being done in Japan, everywhere else...landfills, including China,ans USA
It can be done like this in small scale recycling but there are machines that can do this, they heat up the solar panel en seperate the electronic layer with the silicon and silver and the intact glass sheet as a whole for recyling as glass for new solar panels.
And the fact that 2 guys had to carry it across the floor, one-by-one, for greater than one camera shot is probably a large bottleneck and waste of manpower. Instead, just put the sandblasting rig at the end of the de-framing conveyor and put a motor arm controlling the blaster nozzle.
I dont think the purpose of this facility was to be efficient, which brings up a ton of healthcare concerns for these "artisanal glass recyclers".
Recycling of solar panels is still in the experimental stage and has not been automated or mechanized on a large scale.
@@TheZoneTakesYou
The 4:10 plastic cap removal is even more shocking.
What's the down time between batches?
Anyway, I think this is whole thing is more for the sake of creating job more than anything.
Anything of useful get produced in the end is just a bonus.
Japan leading the way. A very productive people not reliant on food stamps and government handouts.
East Asians and Southeast Asians have the same mentality. Work hard and not rely on govt handing out freebies.
Вы - великая страна!
Потрясающе заботитесь об окружающей среде ❤️
Your making Lava Rocks.. that's the exact sound they make...
Manmade pumice
🌋
Хорошее дело делаете ребята.. Уважение Вам..
Если просто на край моря свозить, думаю, через несколько лет пляж из "изумрудов" будет!
А вьі шо делаете? вам что, за деяния ваши?
@@УльяновКеша самоистребление. в этом славяне преисполнились. видимо шарики за ролики заехали
@@jurybur_bobkov Яким боком рускіе до слов'ян? ))) Подивись склад РФ!!! Там одні чурки з ізрями ))))
А кто их натравливает друг на друга не знаель ?@@jurybur_bobkov
I LOVE this channel. So well made, no AI voice, just showing how Japanese culture does this or that task. It feels like no matter how simple the task the Japanese people turn it into an art form.
hear hear
"I LOVE this channel. It's so well made, with no AI voice-just pure Japanese culture showing how tasks are done. It feels like no matter how simple the task, Japanese people turn it into an art form. What inspired you to focus on showcasing Japanese culture in such a detailed and artistic way?"
А мне понравилось, как японские рабочие глядят не защищёнными глазами в летающую вокруг стеклянную пыль. Интересно, иски к хозяевам производства уже были за потерю зрения?
This video allowed me to dial in an ideal CC font/color/opacity that is great for all TH-cam vids. Nice.
@@potechhdwhat was the point of this comment
太陽光パネルもこの企業ではリサイクルできる事を知りました🎉
That is some incredibly spicy air in that factory lmao
yes, that is concerning
It made me actually cough when I first saw it
Which is why they’re wearing respirators?..
@@streetDAOC lol if you've ever worked in environments with dangerous particles you would know that it's not that simple.
Not to mention how the workers not using any eye protection
Які ж ваші люди молодці. Ви рятуєте планету від сміття! У вас треба вчитися!
Такі прям чудові що повбивали всіх китів та злили радіактивну воду з фукусіми в океан.
広島県民なのにこんな素晴らしい会社があったとは、知らなかった。
ISA TALAGA SA GUSTO KO, ITONG JAPAN. DAHIL VERY QUALITY ANG MGA GAWA. MULA NOON HANGGANG NGAYUN. AT SUBRANG HIGH-TECH. AT PURO MATITIBAY BASTA GAWANG JAPAN💪
SHOUT OUT FROM PHILIPPINES 🇵🇭
A very interesting video. Congratulations Cocco Company.
とても興味深いビデオです。 コッコカンパニーさん、おめでとうございます。
Fascinating, great documentary. The dust generated during this entire process is just insane - literally ! I'd have thought they would have found a way for the dust not to fly around so much. Suction, moisture, anything. As it is, I wonder why the workers are not wearing airtight eye protection as well.
They are wearing PPE.
They are insufficiently protected, I agree.
I'd be a bit more worried about Silcia dust Holy smokes! F this
The amount of energy required is staggering.
too expensive to have that ......
And what are the other ingredients? This would be too cost inhibitive for most countries to implement.
And labour intensive
Наврядли рациональные и экономные японцы запустили бы неэффективное производство!))
why do you say that? It's about the same as making glass from sand (silicon dioxide). making portland cement or steel requires *much* more time at *much* higher temperatures. Making aluminum from bauxite (aluminum ore) is more energy intensive that any of those. As an industrial process it seems pretty calm -- far from *staggering*
It's crazy to me they allow allow that much glass dust to be generated around workers. Should be totally a wet process until right before it goes in the furnace.
The workers have above grade masks, and with proper air flow in the buildings, the dust is AWAY from them.
At least, that is how I would have designed it, and I expect they have better minds than me doing it :p
Air flow is often an under utilised procedure, but it's utilised in MANY industries, especially in food preperation and hazardous industries. I SERIOUSLY doubt they hadn't mitigated that...
damp anything going into a furnace = EXPLOSION
@@andyman8630 Poussière en grande quantité en suspension dans l'air = très gros risque d'explosion également, la poussière est un véritable.
@@andyman8630until right before
Right before being an operative phrase that you seem to have missed
@@LostCylon you're talking ideals. Non western nations deal in cost saving measures, not idealism
スーパーソルは園芸用の鉢底の石として使っています。
初めて製造過程をみました。社会に必要な企業です。
I agree. Societies around the world need to follow this example. 👍🏻
落後的回收加工工藝....令人吃驚.......
아 이게 원예용화분에 깔아놓은 하얀돌이었군요
가볍고 좋던데 파유리분말이라는것을 처음알았네요.
That looks like a really unhealty place to work in and live nearby
ガラスじゃない異物を人が手で取り除いてたり、太陽光パネル1枚1枚を人がサンドブラストかけてることが驚き
ソーラーはおそらく実証実験でしょう。うまくいったら自動化すると思われます。
@@hirofumimomose5014 なるほど〜
Máy nghiền nát thủy tinh mạnh mẽ và hiện đại. Người Nhật làm ăn như ý. Japan 🇯🇵👋.
This seems like an incredible lot of labor, energy, processes to create something I can't imagine they could sell for a quarter of the cost it takes to make. We already have tones and tones of cement been poured with rocks all around the country. Couldn't you just break up the glass bottles and mix them in with normal cement ?
yeah im guessing this industry receives subsidies
cement formation requires porous aggregate for the silicate sludge to fill in and dehydrate to harden. Cant really fill in a bunch of smooth glass shards, and they would make it easier for the greater structure to pull apart around those glass fragments.
Waste glass of this quality has a value between 10 to -50 dollars per ton (yes, negative). Foamed stone has a value of 50+ dollars per ton.
I doubt they're printing money, but this is probably a more profitable enterprise. Processing the glass they have into concrete aggregate would top out at somewhere near 10 dollars a ton and demand would be tempered by the fact that you can't use more than 20% recycled glass in general purpose concrete without compromising on specs.
Very interesting... Greatings from Brazil.
非常优秀的旧物回收改造工程!
Japan as a country and its society never cease to amaze me. Although total perfection does not exist, they are a clear example of being diligent cultivators and indicators that one can be on the path to it with intelligent perseverance and example. Magnificent video, discounting this my subscription and admiration for Japan and its people.
Тем временем в России: Автоваз возобновил выпуск лады весты с АБС...🤣
Fantastic process, but I can't see how this could possibly be cost effective vs ordinary crushed stone.
I was wondering about that as well. Maybe stone quarries are not as common in Japan as they are in other countries for some reason? Even then, you would think shipping it in on bulk cargo ships would still be cheaper than this. I'm guessing there is some sort of government subsidy for re-purposing what would otherwise be waste in a landfill that makes the financial case work.
I'm guessing that landfill space in Japan is limited and expensive. Perhaps that might make the process more cost effective.
@@ottopartz1 There are massive land reclamation projects in Japan, in Tokyo Bay for example; crushed glass (AKA sand) would be as good a fill as anything without the waste of effort and energy of processing it into rock.
I wonder how much it costs- I can think of so many better products that could be made with glass.
@@soundsoflife9549 except this kind of glass is too low quality for recycling into normal glass, obviously, also, when some industrial throws millions at making a factory, you can assume there is a market, a need, and it all make sense. What doesnt make any sense is random youtubers questionning the validity of existing business which are obviously running.
Япония привет!
Идея утилизации стеклянного лома очень хороша. Ставлю высшую оценку. У нас это «5+».
Людей очень жалко, которые работают со стеклянной шихтой (пудрой). Берегите людей!😢
Все дорого и трудозатратно.
Ты бы дешевле и быстрее сделал, мы в курсе.
@@pashamix не в этом дело. Производство похоже на показательное, объемы малы, ручной труд, много перевалок. Особенно панели. Так проблему мусора не решить, ибо дешевле пену делать из первичного стекла.
япония импортирует ВСЁ сырьё и топливо, что потребляет. Всё горючее сжигает на мусоросжигательных заводах, превращая в тепло и электричество, а не горючее - перерабатывает во вторсырьё на второй круг или стройматериалы. В том числе и на расширение своей территории на искусственных островах. И в любом случае это обходится дешевле, чем покупать чистое сырьё из-за бугра, а отходы гноить в земле, которой и так не много. Странам с огромными территориями и "бесконечными" ресурсами это не понять
На счет объемов - мы не знаем, так как накопительный склад ничего не показывает - может там партия биг-бегов накапливается только для погрузки в фуру.
Что касается ручного труда и перегрузок - то не больше чем на любом ГОКе, или производстве, например, силикатного кирпича - процессы похожи.
Для маленькой страны с ограниченными ресурсами вполне применимо и разумно.
This video makes manufacturing look like a high-tech art form!
I'm sneezing just watching this video. But jokes aside I'm so glad when I see waste recycled into something so useful.
Only in Japan. In China ans America they go to landfills. Toxic,green adjenda
The glass bottles are not considered "waste" they are a recyclable product that can be recycled indefinitely, instead they have taken that resource and killed the recycling of it.
Now that's what you call a rock tumbler!!!!
I am obviously missing something here , rocks get crushed to get silica to make glass , then crush glass to make rocks , instead of melting it into more glass , and using the crushed rock to make , well rock .
This is just what they do with the poorer quality glass recycling. Whole bottles/jars are easier to wash the labels off, remove metal, plastic and cork bits, and safer for humans to interact with. This is the broken stuff the sieve out. All part of the flow of the material life cycle!
I also had the impression that brown and green glass could not be recycled. Now I know that they can be recycled, but only into either brown or green glass. Some materials are not recyclable, such as special glass like mirrors because it contains metal, and other. I wonder if template glass is recyclable or not. But I see a tremendous amount of bottles that are thrown into the ordinary garbage. What a waste!!!
you can crush the glass and run it threw a tumbler cheaper than this and it looks nicer too
Yeah, that's what I was thinking. In Europe we call this stuff foam glass. But only the lowest qualities of cullet would be used for this. Cullet with a high amount of ceramics, stones and porcelain should be used for making foam glass. It is really a waste to make foam glass from those good glass qualities ...
Parabéns, vocês japoneses sempre nos surpreende.
Ага, в основном бессмысленностью своих затей 😄
Wissenswertes Video, und kommt zu meine Favoriten🙂❤👍
Японцы это люди из космоса Великая нация любое дело которое они делают это Верх совершенства. Люди из космоса
Так технология времён прошлого века, разработанная немцами.
Looks like it's 5 times more expensive than just crushing a real rock?
Так они бы просто засрались не перерабатывая всё это.
Yeah perhaps, And it's recycling what is otherwise garbage.
@@SmoothCriminalxD glass is not toxic, it seems an energy hungry process, we know it's not economically viable, so it must be the government arbitrarily funding this with taxpayers money. So what is the rationale here? Saving the planet?
@@pittuk6500 you sound like your whole existence is just thinking about money, pathetic
What makes it look five times more expensive?
Disfrute mucho este video y me sorprendió el buen uso de la re-utilización de material de desecho.
Sehr gut und schön !!!
Great ! Respectful work.
Beau travail de France
Thanks for sharing. Watching from Borneo🎉🎉
Good video! Thank you also for the decent soundtrack!
Good !
Forbidden cookies 😊
Fascinating ❤
太陽光パネルも原料になるんですね😮
Les panneaux solaires et les éoliennes sont déjà dans les DÉCHETS alors que ces choses n'ont pas 20 ans !!!! Le " RECYCLAGE " d'un panneau solaire coûte très certainement trois fois plus cher que sa fabrication !😢😢 Comme pour beaucoup d'autres objects de notre nouvelle société. Elle est belle cette civilisation écologique.
These workers should also wear protection glasses.
日本技術是世界第一
😅
خدا حفظتون کنه. مردم سختکوش و باهوش ژاپن ... آخر فناوری و علم ... در جهان همتا ندارید.... باسپاس فراوان ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Japanese are the most creative forward thinkers on the planet
I just saw a container car hauling a load of this kind of material in the us. Foamed glass aggregate.
Sure you did
It all goes to landfills here
Sem sombra de dúvidas........É um povo muito sábio e INTELIGENTE.........maradona FAIXAS e placas de BRASILIA BRASIL...
¡Qué gran video! Aprendí mucho y me entretuve muchísimo.
充分気をつけているとは思いますが、お身体を大切に…塵肺がこわいですよね。
那是因為工藝落後才會有粉塵........
What a difference between the Japanese industry and other Asian / Indian work practices and attitudes. See how health and safety protocols are adhered to for staff - the cleanliness of the work area, the maintained machinery & tools. In this factory working attitudes and practises is spot on.
粉塵作業の管理が大変と思いますが、がんばってください。
良いものを見せてもらった。知らなかった。
No stupid music, or crappy ai voice overs, clean video and subtitles for the info. A + for this vs others i have seen. Keep it up! Good work. Others should take notes on how to make clean videos like this
一個用心為人類未來更好生活的國家。
O ruido que o material produz qdo se pisa nele é maravilhoso , deve dar muito prazer andar em cima da pedra de vidro !
Parabens aos japoneses .
Безумно дорогой процесс! А не проще ли отходы не сильно измельченные просто добавлять в бетонные недорогие конструкции. Например дорожного покрытия. Или в пенобетон.
они потом так и делают, только используют как щебень. достраивают острова вокруг густонаселенных городов
полагаю, с применением стекла, прочность бетона сильно снизится
а еще эта хрень очень легкая, как пенопласт. пыли от нее пиздец. используют например для засыпки к примеру "крыши" подземного паркинга, на которой потом будет внутренний двор.
@@nrt8305 это когда гравий под ногами есть или в ближайшем карьере. А если его необходимо импортировать с других стран, где одна логистика съедает львиную долю расходов, а при этом есть излишки стекломатериалов, вполне рентабельно пробовать новые рецепты
@@GlavR13 да в Японии с горами вообще проблема. Днем с огнем не сыщешь.
I think it's spectacular. I didn't know that. Thanks for the video. I'm a stonemason and I do different crafts with stone. I subscribe to your channel. Greetings from Barcelona.
🤦
I really like the recycled expanded stone. So many potential applications. I would have expected the process would be able to include the paper and alloy contaminates though. I hope this is a new or emerging process as it seems very slow and inefficient. So much double and triple handling.
🇧🇷 Simplesmente Espetacular!!👏👏👏👏👏👏
Excellent ..those Japaness really know how to make stuff❤
Очень важный и информативный ролик. Спасибо !
Muito bom 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
That rotating forklift is the coolest thing.
素晴らしいとは考えますが、作業員の健康を考えるなら、粉塵の舞う現場では、防塵マスクだけではなく、防護メガネが必要では無いでしょうか。同じ様な現場で働いているので、少し心配になりました。
Wow so cool😍
Bravo 👏👏👏👏👏👏✌️👍
Very interesting! Thank You!
Dust collectors must be added. Glass dust is about 50% as dangerous as asbestos dust. The cheap facemasks on the drivers will be only 30% functional. We saw this problem decades ago in California, at various similar mining and re-processing centers. Dangerous work.
Anche usarla produce polvere di silicio. Se si usasse solo incapsulata in altri materiali sarebbe sicura ma non come ciottoli da giardino. Anche solo camminandoci si produce polvere che si inala
I wonder what its insulating properties are if made into tiles? 🤔💭
こういう会社が燃料の高騰等でつぶれないように…
亚洲之光
Glass dust is everywhere... and there is no ventilation above the place where the gray is dumped. And they work without glasses.
Молодцы японцы, капитальные крассавчики--что тут ещё скажешь!
безумно вредная работа , мир держится на простых работягах с заводов , спасибо им за это
Thank you for caring about the planet ❤❤❤. It feels good to see action from waste.
The usa is so messed up. It's not mandatory to recycle in most states. 😢😢😢. I live in one of those states. The state I live in doesn't participate in the buy back recycle of bottles. But where I am originally from, nyc, they buy back bottles and part of nyc have recycle pickup.
American government is even guilty of shipping garbage to places like Africa 😢 and dumping in the ocean 😢.
Something like this would be really helpful and employ so many people.
From rocks, to sands, to glass, to rocks again 😂
Still love the job though, we can never have enough sustainable projects like this
Maior fábrica de cerol do mundo :)
名称もロゴも歌手のCOCCOそのまんまやな
Amazing process.
Судя по объему переработки это капля в море для Японии. Стопроцентный "зелёный проект" государства (или частный за государственные дотации)
это всего-лишь одно из направлений переработки "вечного мусора"
@@GlavR13а у нас это конкретное производство пеностекла, и стоит не как из отходов, а дорого для застройщика частного.
A ridiculous invention, these "stones" must be very expensive. Glass is recycled into glass bottles. All colors sorted. Clear one goes to windows.
Thanks guys! Do it!
That was fascinating ❤
We can do it .great work
1000 класс, что творит камерунец 🤝 ✊ 👍
From sand to glass to rocks. I don't know how I feel about this yet.
Странные люди, из стекла можно сделать вечные теплоизоляционные панели а они посылку для дороги делают.
Такое отношение вызывает уважение молодцы😊
좋다 .. 우리나라도 이 기술을 도입해야한다 앞으로는 재생산업이 각광을 받을것, 환경적인 요소(미세분진,소음등 )만 좀더 보완하면 도심근처에서도 능히 사업할만 함
我們台北市早已垃圾不落地20年...日本遠遠落後.....
재활용 으로 지속적으로 순환이 되야 좋은 것인데 한번쓰면 버려지면 안됩니다
@@黃乃宣
오우 어떻게 그렇게 할수
있나요?대단합니다
@@黃乃宣 на Байкале недавно обнаружили плавающее мусорное пятно. народы мира должны раскритиковать руководство России за то, что она так относится к самому большому запасу пресной воды всего человечества, но все молчат
@@DSb-vn8qm 歡迎日本.韓國人來台灣學習如何垃圾分類...日本還停留在古代...我們早在20年前已有先進的垃圾分類而且垃圾不落地.....
10 лет на постройку завода ,миллиард долларов ради того,чтобы превратить стекло в камень ?!
This is fantastic!
Thank You!🦀
Interesting!! Loved the music too!!
Будет сенсацией если скажу, что в Армении в конце 70-их выпустили брюки из каменной нити, которым не было износа. Сам им пользовался, а когда призвали в армию подарил брюки другу автомеханику, который долго их носил.
Because glass powder totally sounds like something I'd want my lungs and my face to be full of
it also seems like they absolutely hate safety regulations and are actively breaking all of them, you can even see some of them take off their respirators so they can take in large gulps of the air
And yet,these dudes will live a healthier, longer life than you internet safety inspectors.
@@yangerjamir0906 doubt
ژاپنیها بسیار مردم با پشتکار زیاد و باهوشی هستند ❤❤❤