Soil screening is a specialist process used during Japanese knotweed excavation to separate rhizome and other knotweed material from the surrounding soil. By removing only the contaminated fraction, screening can significantly reduce the volume of waste that must be treated as knotweed infested, lowering disposal costs and environmental impact.
Screening is often used as part of wider remediation strategies such as Xtract™, stockpile and treat or dig and dump.
Soil screening involves passing excavated knotweed infested soils through mechanical equipment that separates coarse material, including rhizome, crowns and larger root fragments, from finer soils.
The basic process is:
The aim is to remove as much viable rhizome as possible while preserving the maximum amount of clean soil for re-use.
Screening is typically deployed on medium to large development sites where:
It can be used on its own as a volume reduction technique or integrated into a more advanced zero waste solution.
When correctly designed and supervised, screening offers several benefits:
Screening is not suitable for every site or soil type. Key considerations include:
For complete removal and a faster programme, methods such as Dig and Dump may be more appropriate.
Soil screening is most effective when it forms part of a broader knotweed strategy. For example:
Your chosen approach will depend on site constraints, timescales and budget. Our specialists can advise on whether screening is appropriate as part of your knotweed remediation plan.
Rest assured, where invasive species are identified at an early stage and tackled correctly, problems can usually be avoided. Our specialist consultants complete thorough surveys to identify the extent of the problem. Our plans aren’t one-size-fits-all; they’re customised to tackle the invasive species at your property effectively, taking account of all of your requirements.
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