When pruning work is completed, the same question always arises: what to do with all this green waste? Branches, cuttings, wood of varying thicknesses... These volumes can quickly become overwhelming. However, what was once considered a constraint is now becoming a valuable raw material. Farmers, local authorities and maintenance professionals now see it as a way to reduce costs, improve the management of their land and recycle an already available natural resource.
Why is green waste considered a valuable resource rather than waste that needs to be managed?
The gardens designed by André Le Nôtre are based on a strict plant architecture: tall hedges, structured paths, dense groves. Behind the piles of branches accumulated after a brush cutter has passed, there is a potential that is rarely exploited. These residues contain carbon, fibres, nutrients and light wood that is easy to handle. In other words, they are not waste, but raw materials to be transformed, destined to be recycled rather than discarded.
Instead of thinking about disposal or storage, it becomes interesting to ask how we can reuse what nature already provides. This logic changes the approach to construction sites: we no longer cut solely for maintenance purposes, we also cut to produce a reusable resource, integrated into a green waste recycling process.
What local solutions can be implemented to recycle pruning waste?
Depending on the size of the site and operational requirements, there are several simple ways to recycle green waste from pruning. Among the most relevant are:
- converting residues into mulch to protect the soil and limit weeds,
- produce wood chips for use in boilers, as bedding or ground cover,
- deposit green waste in a composting facility to enrich local soil.
The objective remains the same: to avoid unnecessary trips, limit transport costs and create a virtuous circle around hedge management.
How does the management of agricultural hedges influence the quantity and quality of residues?
A regularly maintained hedge produces less waste that is difficult to work with. The cuttings are finer, more uniform and much easier to shred or process. Conversely, a hedge that is left untended for too long produces large volumes of thick branches that are more difficult to handle.
The cutting method is also important, as a clean cut produces higher quality waste that is easier to reduce and more suitable for effective recycling. The equipment used is therefore essential to avoid waste that is too fragmented, irregular or difficult to sort.
How do our Coup’Eco cutting decks contribute to more sustainable green waste management?
At Coup’Eco, we have always believed that a good hedge trimmer is not just for maintaining hedges, but also influences how the clippings are managed afterwards, particularly their potential for recycling. A clean, even cut makes all the subsequent stages easier.
Our pruning blades enable, in particular:
- produce branches that are easy to shred,
- reduce the time spent handling residues,
- keep hedges healthy, which limits excess volumes over the years and optimises green waste recycling.
By developing robust and accurate tools, we support farmers who wish to integrate green waste recycling into their daily operations. This is a way to optimise the time spent in the field while enhancing the environmental consistency of their work.
Towards smarter and more beneficial management of pruning residues
Transforming green waste into a useful resource changes both the way we work and how we perceive maintenance. This approach increases autonomy, reduces costly operations and makes the most of what the pruning site naturally produces.
We apply this logic in the field by designing cutter bars that offer controlled cutting, are pleasant to work with and are compatible with downstream recycling. This is another step towards more responsible maintenance, where every action has a purpose and every piece of waste can become a useful material.



