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(check list below for further info)
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LANDFILLS: Hazardous to the
Environment
Landfill liners are just 1/10 of an inch thick.
SEE: THE BASICS OF
LANDFILLS, plus LANDFILL
DIAGRAM
Also check-out:
Disposal &
Recycling Statistics,Maps&Graphs
MORE
PHOTOS
LANDFILL VIDEO -
this takes several minutes to download

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ALL LANDFILL LINERS AND LEACHATE
COLLECTION SYSTEMS WILL FAIL ...
"First, even the best liner
and leachate collection system will ultimately fail due to natural
deterioration, and recent improvements in MSWLF containment
technologies suggest that releases may be delayed by many decades at
some landfills. For this reason, the Agency is concerned that while
corrective action may have already been triggered at many
facilities, 30 years may be insufficient to detect releases at other
landfills." Source:
US EPA Federal Register, Aug 30, 1988, Vol.53, No.168,
(scanned
document). Check-out
Peter Montegue's Rachel's
for list of other comments in Federal Register
by EPA.
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SUMMARY
The U.S. has 3,091 active landfills and over
10,000 old municipal landfills, according to the Environmental Protection
Agency. However, in the "good old days," every town (and many businesses
and factories) had its own dump. According to the 1997 U.S.
Census, there are 39,044 general purpose local governments in the
United States - 3,043 county governments and 36,001 subcounty general
purpose governments (towns & townships). One suspects that there are
many more old and abandoned commercial, private, and municipal dumps than
the 10,000 estimated by the EPA. Municipal landfills and their leachate (water) and air emissions
are hazardous. Municipal landfills can accept hazardous waste under
federal law. An unlimited number of 'conditionally exempt small
generators' of hazardous waste have access to municipal landfills. (See
40 CFR 261.5).
All landfills will eventually fail and leak
leachate into ground and surface water. Plastics are not inert.
State-of-the-art plastic (HDPE) landfill liners (1/10 inch or 100 mils
thick) and plastic pipes allow chemicals and gases to pass through their
membranes, become brittle, swell, and breakdown.
"...82% of surveyed landfill cells had leaks while 41% had a
leak area of more than 1 square feet," according to Leak Location Services, Inc.
(LLSI) website (March 15, 2000).
According to Dr. Fred Lee, "detection in
new landfills can be difficult since the only way to know this is
detection in the monitoring wells. The likelihood of a monitoring
well at a single or double lined landfill detecting an initial leak is
very small." Monitoring wells should be located in areas most likely to
detect contamination (i.e., testing the ground water after it has passed
under the landfill.) See: Subchapter I: Solid Waste. Lined landfills leak in very narrow plumes, whereas old, unlined
landfills will produce wide plumes of leachate.
Old and new landfills are typically located
next to large bodies of water (i.e., rivers, lakes, bays, etc), making
leakage detection and remediation (clean-up) extremely difficult. This is
due to the incursion of surface water in both instances. Federal and state
governments have allowed landfill operators to locate landfills next to
water bodies under the misguided principle: Detection by monitoring wells
can also be very difficult at lined landfills. Lined landfills leak in
very narrow plumes, whereas old, unlined landfills will produce wide
plumes of leachate.
Ground water flows downstream, or toward nearby
lakes and rivers. In some cases, monitoring wells have been located
around landfills in areas least likely to detect leakage (i.e.,
upstream of the groundwater flow). This is in violation of federal law.
See Code of Federal Regulations (CFR): Chapter I -
Environmental Protection Agency, Subchapter
I: Solid Waste / PART
258 (Updated 1997) - Criteria for Municipal Solid Waste Landfills
(Adobe PDF). If a landfill is located next to a water body, then the
monitoring wells should be located between the landfill and the water; or
(if there is no space left), in the water. See: EPA's
Ground Water Monitoring
All landfills could require remediation, but
particularly landfills built in the last 60 years will require a thorough
clean-up due to the disposal of highly toxic chemicals manufactured and
sold since the 1940's. See:Remediation and
Brownsfields
EXPERTS &
WEBSITES:
-
JANUARY 2007: "Lynn, I wish to bring to your
attention a new paper has been published on the health effects of
hazardous chemical sites such as landfills, where the authors have
shown an association between proximity to such sites and increased
incidence of hospitalization for diabetes. Please find
enclosed a recent write-up that I have prepared on this issue, in
which I have included discussion of the diabetes paper, as well as
an earlier paper on birth defects. If you or others in your
group have questions or comments, please contact me."
ALSO: “Flawed Technology of Subtitle D Landfilling of Municipal
Solid Waste,” Report of G. Fred Lee & Associates, El Macero,
CA, December (2004). Updated January (2007)
This report is a synthesis of about 23 years of work on dry
tomb landfills.
G. Fred Lee, PhD, DEE, AAEE Bd. Cert. Env. Eng. (also expert on construction and
demolition debris) G. Fred Lee & Associates 27298
E. El Macero Dr. El Macero, CA 95618-1005 Ph 530 753-9630,
Cell 916 712-7399 or 530 400-4952 Fx 530 753-9956
(Turned on upon request) gfredlee@aol.com, http://www.gfredlee.com/
- Dr. Paul & Ellen Connett, Founders
of WorkOnWaste,
National experts and lecturers on incinerators, landfills, and
fluoride, 83 Judson Street, Canton, New York, (315) 379-9200 /
(315) 379-0448 fax / wastenot@northnet.org
- http://www.rachel.org/ - An
excellent site. Search for "landfill liners,"
"landfills," etc.
- Dennis E. Williams, Ph.D., founder and
president of GEOSCIENCE Support Services, Inc., 1326 Monte Vista
Avenue, Suite 3, P.O. Box 220, Claremont, CA 91711, (909)
920-0707, formed in 1978 to provide consulting to the ground water
industry. Dr. Williams has over 30 years of experience in ground
water consulting, specializing in ground water planning,
development and management, with specific emphasis on the ground
water basins of Southern California.LANDFILLS THAT
LEAK
- International Geosynthetics Society
& Other
Geotechnical Sites & RESEARCH
PAPERS
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DETAILS...
SEE: THE BASICS OF
LANDFILLS, plus LANDFILL
DIAGRAM
New "WET" Landfills - BIOREACTORS - cause
concerns:
- National
Recycling Council By Notice dated April 6, 2000 (65 Fed. Reg.
18014), the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency ("EPA") requested
comments and information concerning the design and performance of
so-called "bioreactor landfills." We are writing in response to this
request on behalf of our client, the National Recycling Coalition, Inc.
(the "Coalition"). CARTER, LEDYARD &
MILBURN
- Government "pro-bioreactor"
info:
Health
Effects of Landfills:
LEAKAGE info:
- Landfills That Leak by Dennis E.
Williams, Ph.D founder and president of GEOSCIENCE Support Services,
Inc., 1326 Monte Vista Avenue, Suite 3, P.O. Box 220, Claremont, CA
91711, (909) 920-0707, formed in 1978 to provide consulting to the
ground water industry. Dr. Williams has over 30 years of experience in
ground water consulting, specializing in ground water planning,
development and management, with specific emphasis on the ground water
basins of Southern California./
- Rachel's #37 (08/10/87):
EPA Says All Landfills Leak
- Rachel's # 117 - The Best
Landfill Liner: HDPE
- Mechanisms
Of Leakage Through Synthetic Landfill Liner
Materials Imperial College, Great
Britain
- RECYCLING LEACHATE BACK THROUGH A
LANDFILL: Based on the available
literature, pumping leachate back through a landfill causes increased
decomposition, and it seems logical that it would also create a super
toxic leachate. In addition, it would most likely accelerate the
decomposition of the liner itself, thereby allowing leachate to
contaminate ground water at an increased rate.
LANDFILL EMISSIONS:
- Rachel's #90 (08/15/88):
MSW Leachate As Toxic As Hazardous Waste.
- Low Level
Radioactive Waste by Judy Johnsrud, Sierra Club.
- Rachel's #69 (03/21/88): Landfilling Low-Level Radioactive
Waste
- Rachel's #371 (01/06/94): Superfund Dumps &
Health
- EPA's
(CESQG) Page - EPA allows an unlimited number of "Conditionally
Exempt Small Quantity Generators of Hazardous Waste" to dump hazardous
waste in municipal waste landfills.
- BURNING LANDFILL
GAS:
- Primer on Landfill Gas as "Green"
Energy Pennsylvania
Environmental Network
-
Alliance For a Clean
Environment (ACE)- This Pennsylvania group has
collected a significant amount of information on landfill
gas.
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TYPICAL CONSTITUENTS AND
COMPOUNDS FOUND IN LANDFILL GAS
TABLE 1: Typical Constituents Found
in Municipal Solid Waste Landfill Gas
Component
Percent
(dry volume basis)*
Methane
40-60% Carbon
Dioxide
40-60% Nitrogen
2-5% Oxygen
0.1-1.0% Ammonia
0.1-1.0% Sulfides, disulfides,
mercaptans,etc.
0-0.2% Hydrogen
0-0.2% Carbon
Monoxide
0-0.2% Trace
Constituents
0.01-0.6%
* Exact
percentage distribution will vary with the age of the
landfill.
TABLE 2: Typical Concentrations of
Some Trace Compounds Found in Landfill
Gas
Component Mean
Concentration (pbV, parts per billion by
volume)
Toluene 34,907 Dichloromethane 25,694 Ethyl
Benzene
7,334 Acetone 6,838 Vinyl
Acetate 5,663 Tetrachloroethylene 5,244 Vinyl
Chloride 3,508 Methyl
Ethyl
Ketone 3,092 Xylenes 2,651 1,1-Dichloroethane 2,801 Trichloroethylene 2,079 Benzene 2,057
SOURCE: G. Tchobanoglous, H. Theisen and S.
Vigil, "Integrated Solid Waste Management, Engineering Principles
and Management Issues," McGraw-Hill, New York, 1993. Shown here
as reproduced in J.Wilcos, Ph.D., and W.Clister, "Waiting is Over:
Landfills Have Clean Air Act Rules," Solid Waste
Technologies, March/April 1996.
Provided by Dan Knapp of Urban Ore,
Berkley, California
LANDFILL GAS & FIRE
INFORMATION:
Write off for research papers from The
University of Kuopio, Eastern Finland: Directory of papers: http://www.uku.fi/wwwdata/julkaisutoiminta/laitoksittain/ymptiet.html
LANDFILL COVER: The EPA
allows the use of toxic incinerator ash as daily landfill cover, instead
of soil, as the public was originally told.
LANDFILL DETECTION: Old, grown-over landfills can be identified by using GRP
(Ground Penetrating Radar) or by reviewing county or state aerial
photographs that often go back to the 1960's.
LEAKAGE DETECTION COMPANIES:
COURT DECISIONS:
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REGULATIONS & EPA SOLID WASTE
LINKS:
NOTE: When looking for
information on local recycling and waste disposal, call your local
municipal government. In some cases, the county (or parish) will be
your starting point. For state and federal information on
environmental issues, including solid waste, visit the following
webpage - EPA
Regions & State Environmental
Departments
EPA LANDFILL INFO


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LANDFILL LOCATIONS: Use TerraServer to locate Areas of Interest from
Satellite Photos!
 TULLYTOWN LANDFILL (terraced features, northeast of
center) On the Delaware River, Tullytown, Bucks County, PA. View
this area on Terra Server.
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