Amiantop as industrial infrastructure

Technological convergence, operational experience, and territorial response

Technological convergence, operational experience, and territorial response AMIANTOP is not conceived as an isolated industrial facility nor as the simple implementation of an existing technology. The project is developed with the objective of constituting a permanent industrial infrastructure, designed to address a structural public health and environmental problem from a territorial, industrial, and regulatory perspective.

Its configuration responds to the need to overcome the limitations of the current asbestos management model, through a solution capable of integrating technology, operational experience, and institutional framework within a single infrastructure.

The origin of AMIANTOP lies in the convergence of two complementary domains. On the one hand, the technological expertise of EFI Ecotech Group, developer of FS Green technology, conceived as an industrial platform for the physical transformation of complex and hazardous materials. On the other, the operational experience of REFORMAS, CONTRATAS Y REDES (RCR) in the removal, handling, and actual management of asbestos-containing materials in compliance with current regulations.

This convergence is neither theoretical nor incidental. It is the result of a shared conclusion: management based on encapsulation, transport, and landfill does not allow the asbestos problem to be definitively resolved, and requires an industrial response of greater scope.

AMIANTOP materializes this conclusion in an infrastructure specifically designed to eliminate the liability, not to manage it indefinitely.

Convergence of criteria: technology and real-world experience

From its inception, AMIANTOP has been conceived as a scalable and replicable model, based on an infrastructure logic rather than a one-off installation.

The experience derived from its implementation allows the definition of clear criteria for adaptation to other territorial and regulatory contexts, while maintaining the fundamental principles of the model.

This approach enables the future evolution of the project without the need to reformulate its conceptual basis, allowing its integration into broader strategies for reindustrialization and management of complex environmental liabilities.

Industrial scope and model evolution

AMIANTOP is currently in the administrative processing phase, being developed in accordance with the authorization procedures required for industrial infrastructures of this type.

The project relies on a prudent, technical, and verifiable approach, aimed at facilitating evaluation by the competent authorities and ensuring its compatibility with current and prospective regulatory requirements in industrial safety, environment, and public health.

At this stage, the project’s website serves a strictly institutional and technical function, acting as the official point of information for the project.

Project in administrative phase

By its nature and purpose, AMIANTOP is configured as an infrastructure of territorial interest, intended to serve a broader scope than that of its immediate location.

The facility is designed with the capacity to receive asbestos-containing materials from other public and private operators, within the applicable regulatory framework, contributing to reducing dependence on specialized landfills and providing an industrial alternative for the definitive elimination of the material.

This approach makes it possible to address the asbestos problem from a coordinated territorial perspective, rather than through fragmented or dispersed solutions.

Infrastructure of territorial interest

AMIANTOP does not merely apply a technology at a specific site, but transforms that technology into an integrated industrial infrastructure, with its own design, operation, and control criteria.

The facility is conceived to operate continuously, under stable industrial conditions, with full process traceability and integration into the territorial and regulatory environment. This approach makes it possible to move from one-off or temporary solutions to a structural response, capable of handling significant volumes of material and operating over the long term.

From technology to infrastructure