China Turns to Recycled Coal Waste to Meet Surging Demand for Construction Sand
June 16, 2026 - China is turning the massive environmental liabilities of its coal-mining history into the raw materials for its next generation of infrastructure.
In the southeastern county of Gaoping, located deep within China’s premier coal province of Shanxi, a massive new recycling facility has quietly begun operations. It transforms the waste into high-value industrial and building materials.
Reportedly, its daily output sounds like a standard quarry operation: 1,000 tonnes of sand, gravel, and unburnt bricks destined for the country’s endless appetite for concrete.
But these construction materials did not come from a riverbed or a mountain quarry. The material was extracted from coal gangue, which is the ultra-hard, toxic rock waste left behind after mining and washing coal.
Specialized facility
China’s coal gangue is expected to be around 7 billion tonnes. Left unmanaged, coal waste routinely triggers water contamination, airborne dust pollution, and spontaneous fires.
Less than 60 percent of this mountain of rock was ever reused. The rest stayed behind as a permanent ecological tax on resource-dependent cities. Now, technology is cracking that stubborn bone to turn the waste into an industrial resource.
The South China Morning Post (SCMP) reported that the Gaoping facility consists of automated systems that sort the incoming waste using X-ray separation equipment. From there, the material is crushed, screened, and stripped of impurities. The result is a stream of manufactured aggregates and eco-friendly unburnt bricks that skip the high-emission firing process entirely.
Local authorities say the applications reach far beyond basic roads. The refined waste is finding its way into ceramics and even high-tech spacecraft coatings.
Broader circular economy
Beyond recycling coal waste, China is eyeing a broader circular economy to overhaul its construction material supply.
China uses nearly half of the world’s construction sand and gravel, a habit that has severely degraded fragile river ecosystems. Replacing natural sand with coal waste solves two environmental headaches at once.
Research also suggests that recycling construction and demolition waste could meet half of China’s aggregate demand by 2050.
The industry is scaling up at breakneck speed. While attempts to recycle gangue date back to the 1950s, the economic incentive shifted after 2010 as natural sand supplies tightened and Beijing locked in its national carbon targets.
Last year, a milestone 10-million-tonne utilization project was launched in Datong.
The strategy is not without its speed bumps. Industry experts caution that aggregates derived from coal waste currently represent only a tiny sliver of China’s annual consumption.
Due to the material’s structural limitations, it cannot be used for high-strength or critical load-bearing structures like skyscraper pillars or major bridges. Strict toxicity testing is also mandatory to ensure heavy metals do not leach out of the residential walls of the future.
This strategy operates alongside efforts to harvest industrial value from existing fossil fuel liabilities—such as extracting critical technology metals like lithium, gallium, and germanium from mining byproducts. Furthermore, trapping power plant emissions to manufacture affordable agricultural fertilizer.
The development shows that a zero-waste future might actually be possible simply by turning a toxic liability into literal building blocks.