Can old tires be deducted when replaced?
1 Answers
Yes, but the price will be based on the value of waste materials. Old tires are generally recycled by auto parts markets. Waste tire recycling: Tire vendors collect various used tires from tire repair shops, waste collection stations, and drivers. After centralized collection and sorting, they sell them to local or upstream merchants as needed. The upstream merchants (such as retreading, hot patching, sleeve tire, or cord fabric processing points) process them into usable tires and sell them back to tire repair shops or drivers. The upstream merchants (waste tire processors, including segmentation: crushing, grinding, and oil refining) further process the tires and sell them to higher-level merchants. Notes on old tire disposal: Tire retreading is a technology that repairs and processes worn or otherwise damaged tires to restore their usability. Adding catalysts and other methods to refine waste tires into oil involves heating and pressurizing waste tires to extract fuel. If simple and cheap equipment is used, this technology can easily cause secondary pollution.