Landfill
From open-encyclopedia.com - the free encyclopedia.
- Landfill can also refer to Land reclamation. This article refers to landfill as a waste dump.
A landfill is an area designated to receive solid wastes, such as municipal solid waste (household trash), construction debris, and sludge from sewage treatment and other processes.
To reduce smells, vermin, and other health hazards, a layer of soil, usually an impermeable clay, is spread over each layer of garbage, usually at the end of each operating day.
Modern, well-run landfills are also lined with plastic or bentonite clay to prevent toxic leachates from entering the groundwater. They also usually have methane wells to safely extract methane from the deepest parts. In many large landfills, this methane is piped to a generator to make electricity.
Some local landfill authorities have found it difficult to locate nearby landfill areas. Most areas in most countries do not have this problem. For many areas, a well-run land-fill is a hygienic, inexpensive solution to garbage disposal. Poorly run landfills can pollute both air and groundwater.
Environmental activists dislike landfills not only because of the potential for pollution, but because they permanently remove various raw materials from economic use. All of the energy and natural resources (such as water) that were used to process the items "wasted" are also not conserved. This is said to contribute to damage of forests, and agricultural areas, including in less-developed countries that derive a majority of their export revenues from raw materials. However, recycled used materials compete in the marketplace with new materials. Most of the discarded materials are low in value, making it difficult to profit from their sale. This in turn reduced motivation to recycle.
Living close to a landfill is considered by many people to be very undesirable, therefore most landfills are built a reasonable distance away from most civilization, starting from 0.25 of a mile. Environmental pollution of land, air, and water created by the world's poorly-managed landfills is enormous.
In eras before the mid-20th century, landfills were the main method of waste management. In the late-20th century, alternative methods to waste disposal have been suggested, including recycling, converting to biodegradable products, incineration and cogeneration facilities, and sustainable development, which assist in reducing global pollution.
The "Fresno Municipal Sanitary Landfill", opened in Fresno, California in 1937, is considered to have been the first modern, sanitary landfill in the United States, innovating the techniques of trenching, compacting, and the daily covering of trash with dirt. It has been designated a National Historic Landmark, underlining the significance of waste disposal in urban society.
Some countries with a high population density, such as the UK, tax the use of landfills.
| Topics related to waste |
| Compost | E-waste | Garbage truck | Greywater | Incineration | Landfill | Pollution | Radioactive waste | Recycling | Sewage | Scrap | Sewage treatment | Toxic waste | Waste management |
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