Here’s how we do it:
National Gypsum's sustainable manufacturing practices

Energy savings
Byproduct gypsum
Recycled paper
Recycling used wallboard
Reducing transportation
Water, air, and more
 

 

 

 

Byproduct Gypsum

Byproduct gypsum is the ultimate recyclable. It comes from a process used to remove sulfur dioxide from emissions at coal-fired power plants. After the power plant removes fly ash and other impurities from the coal combustion process, the remaining stack emissions are fed through a limestone slurry which removes sulfur dioxide. The byproduct of this process is calcium sulfate – the chemical name for gypsum rock.

Three National Gypsum plants produce wallboard exclusively with byproduct gypsum: Shippingport, PA, near Pittsburgh; Apollo Beach, FL, near Tampa; and Mt. Holly, NC, near Charlotte. Other plants use a blend of natural rock and byproduct gypsum, including the company’s Westwego Plant, near New Orleans, which uses over 80 percent byproduct gypsum.