Landfills: Problems

WASTE AND nuright03RESOURCE MANAGEMENT NEWSLETTER

Enter your Email


Powered by FeedBlitz

Last Updated:
 

Add to My Yahoo! 

 

 

Landfills: Environmental Problems

MSW Landfills are very unpopular due to the many environmental problems which have been attributed to landfills. In Europe there is massive investment underway to reduce substantially our reliance on landfills.

 

In many areas worldwide landfill space is running out, due to public hostility arising from public perception of landfills and environmental problems, and a landfill shortage crisis is looming within the next 10 years, unless the tonnages of wastes currently disposed to landfill are successfully and very rapidly reduced.

There is no truly popular waste disposal method, other than minimising and recycling waste so that it does not become a waste. There are just some waste disposal methods which are less unpopular than others. Even composting, which comes with undeniably the best environmental benefits, becomes unpopular to most of us if to be carried out on a commercial scale in our own neighbourhood.

So what are the problems of landfill? In a word “emissions”.

Emissions are the major problem. There are others, such as high traffic generation - but similar high traffic generation land-uses do not engender such high levels of public objection, and there can also be property value loss, but this is not truly an environmental problem.

Local landfill problems can also exist, mostly exacerbated by poor regulation, due to vermin, and scavenging bird populations.

Globally, landfills contribute to the “greenhouse effect”, due to landfill gas emissions. (More...)

There are actually some very real environmental advantages provided by some landfill sites. However, on balance, these do seem insignificant to most people and particularly to local residents, in the vast majority of cases.

Nevertheless, in fairness to landfill we would like to mention that:-

  • Dangerous deep and steep walled quarries become safe once filled and restored;
  • Even shallow excavations for sand extraction can present risks of drowning (eg to young children), which landfilling removes;
  • After-uses for agricultural use, as parks, golf courses etc., and even as all-weather ski slope sites can be big assets to the local community/environment;
  • Landfill development can pay for cleaning up contaminated land sites, for which there would be no other source of funding;
  • They are “low-cost” when compared to all other waste treatment technologies, and let’s not underrate the importance of this point in poor and developing nations;
  • Zero waste production might be a fashionable target to aim for, but no-one has achieved it yet. Is it a sensible aim at any price? Surely, there will be a cost (not least in terms of energy usage) which it will not be sensible to exceed in the quest to avoid landfill?

Main Landfill Environmental Problems

Emissions from landfills, are arguably the biggest landfill environmental problems and can be categorised as:

  1. Emissions to atmosphere
  2. Emissions to the water environment

1. Emissions to Atmosphere

These comprise:

  • noise, dust, odour, and possibly bio-aerosols, predominantly from landfill site operation;
  • landfill gas - from soon after opening and for possibly several hundred years thereafter.

2. Emissions to Water

These comprise the potential emission of leachate and contaminated surface water run-off to:

  • watercourses (ditches, streams, rivers etc)
  • groundwater in permeable strata below the landfill.

 

Residual Landfill problems

All these environmental problems can in theory be “ameliorated”. That is, their negative effects can be designed-out by skilful engineering once criteria have been set up which only allow suitable sites to be chosen. The costs of so-doing are high, but achievable for the life of the designed containment systems, at the right site locations especially when the costs of very high percentage rates of landfill avoidance are considered (after all reasonable waste minimisation & recycling achievable is attained).

However, in the writer’s view, “sustainable” landfill means the avoidance of damaging emissions to the environment in perpetuity, and this cannot be achieved by any modern landfill currently or recently licensed in Europe. (See landfill liabilities.)

The Public perhaps assume that landfilling under the new EU Waste Regulations and IPPC Regime, landfills will now be environmentally safe and sustainable. This is not so, and the environmental problems at the heart of landfilling are not solved.

The mono-disposal landfilling of hazardous wastes, as now required by the EU Waste Regulations, is more of a “time bomb” than the previous UK co-disposal practise.

Sustainability cannot even be achieved by only disposing pre-treated non-hazardous wastes which comply with the EU Regulations. Complying with these new regulations, despite the very high cost, will not achieve sustainability. Pre-treated waste will still generate leachate of similar contamination levels to older modern landfills, and landfill gas will still also be emitted.

These regulations have been formulated to achieve diversion of organic content away from landfill - not primarily to produce a harmless residue when landfilled. The pre-treated residues are not harmless. Recent research has shown that even for the pre-treated wastes the natural rate of self purification is so slow as to render their lifetimes to be so long as to rank alongside “geological” time scales when major changes in topography (eg erosion and  earth movement) may occur which at any time would then release environmentally damaging emissions.

(The only positive aspect is that the total volume of waste landfilled will be less, and the impact presumably correspondingly less.)

Long Lasting Landfill Environmental Problem

So, the ultimate landfill problem is that we cannot stop landfilling, because the cost of anything approaching “zero waste” is too high financially and indeed environmentally.

Yet, we have not learnt how to construct a landfill so that it can decompose, self-compost, settle, flush and drain quickly enough to avoid the presence of harmful contaminants remaining when geological damage and inevitable deterioration of the lining breaches the containment system.

The best hope is that the rate of development of technology and our political and regulatory system will allow future generations to extract themselves from the burden of maintaining an ever increasing number of old landfills. This might be achieved by utilising the old landfills as “mines”, using future technology, as yet only dreamt of to achieve the level of efficient recycling we cannot achieve today.

See also alternative landfilling ideas in aerobic landfill.

Other problems are: landfill fires, landfill leaks, and knowing how long waste decomposition will take.

Landfill Problems in the News

This is a Newsfeed. The content is delivered by the News provider and is not controlled by us.


landfill tip - Google News
Updated : Fri, 12 Mar 2010 11:10:58 GMT+00:00

DANC programs aim to improve recycling and facilities - WatertownDailyTimes.com

DANC programs aim to improve recycling and facilities
WatertownDailyTimes.com
The budget also makes plans to keep the tipping fees at the landfill stable. In January 2009, the DANC board of directors set aside $300000 from the ...

and more »

Publ.Date : Tue, 23 Feb 2010 10:28:52 GMT+00:00

Small Loader with a Big Heart - ThomasNet Industrial News Room (press release)

ThomasNet Industrial News Room (press release)

Small Loader with a Big Heart
ThomasNet Industrial News Room (press release)
Waters is the Operations Manager for Clover Flat Landfill in St. Helens, California, a Construction and Demolition (C&D) facility located a short distance ...


Publ.Date : Mon, 08 Mar 2010 13:52:52 GMT+00:00

Hard rubbish collection dumped - The Border Mail

Hard rubbish collection dumped
The Border Mail
If passed by a full council meeting the loss of the annual pick-up will be offset by an extra two vouchers to the tip. ...


Publ.Date : Tue, 09 Mar 2010 02:15:32 GMT+00:00

Plan will send some Bonner mill toxic waste to Missoula landfill, worst out of ... - The Missoulian

Plan will send some Bonner mill toxic waste to Missoula landfill, worst out of ...
The Missoulian
Someday we're all going to tip over, and who's going to remember it's there?" Large is DEQ's project manager, at least in part because he was project ...

and more »

Publ.Date : Fri, 12 Mar 2010 06:03:24 GMT+00:00

City pleased it dumped hard-waste collection - The Border Mail

City pleased it dumped hard-waste collection
The Border Mail
He said in the last year it was undertaken, the council collected 600 tip trucks worth of refuse that went straight into landfill. ...


Publ.Date : Tue, 09 Mar 2010 23:09:27 GMT+00:00

Council takes out the trash - The Gympie Times

Council takes out the trash
The Gympie Times
... available for landfill garbage disposal. Mayor Ron Dyne said the extra lifetime for the tip was accounted for by the heavier and better machine, ...


Publ.Date : Thu, 11 Mar 2010 16:16:16 GMT+00:00

Spring Gardening 2010: Compost Is In, Chemicals Are So Out! - Huffington Post (blog)

Huffington Post (blog)

Spring Gardening 2010: Compost Is In, Chemicals Are So Out!
Huffington Post (blog)
In some forward-thinking towns the local recycling or refuse center will sell compost inexpensively while helping to keep more garbage out of the landfill. ...

and more »

Publ.Date : Wed, 10 Mar 2010 00:05:59 GMT+00:00

City told of landfill fraud but denied its existence - Rapid City Journal

City told of landfill fraud but denied its existence
Rapid City Journal
... defraud the City Landfill between either Fish Garbage Service or our landfill attendants,” Ellis wrote May 5. Kooiker contends the tip should have been ...

and more »

Publ.Date : Sun, 21 Feb 2010 14:13:27 GMT+00:00

Add RSS Feeds To My Web Pages
Backlinks
 

 

[Home] [Articles] [Landfill Problems]

[Home] [Waste Directory] [Waste News] [Hazardous Waste] [Inert Waste] [Articles] [Landfill Pictures] [Events] [Site Map] [Members] [Landfill Terms] [Skip Hire Info] [SWMPS Solid Waste Management Plans] [Contact Us] [Legal]

"The Landfill Site" web site

 

© 2000 - 2010 IPPTS Associates -
The Landfill Site