March-April 2009

A Whole Lot of Nothing

Never underestimate the value of landfill airspace.

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By Daniel P. Duffy

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The Impacts of Daily Cover
State and federal regulations require that some sort of cover material be applied to the current working face at the end of each day and to those interior waste slopes that may be exposed for extended periods of time. This is done to minimize the potential of landfill nuisances affecting the public and the environment. These nuisances include odors, dust, blown litter, and disease vectors (vermin, insects, and birds).

The traditional method of daily cover (the one most mentioned directly by state landfill regulations) is the spreading of a minimum 6-inch layer of cover soil over the current working face at the end of each workday. How much volume is taken up by this cover soil varies from landfill to landfill, depending on the amount of waste received during the workday.

For example, take a landfill that receives an average of 600 tons per day of waste. Good compaction practices yield an in-place density of 0.60 tons per cubic yard. As a result, the amount of space used up on average each day by waste placement operations would be about 1,000 cubic yards (27,000 cubic feet, or 0.62 acre-feet). Assuming a typical lift thickness of about 6 feet, the daily waste cell would cover an area of about 4,500 square feet (a square roughly 65–70 feet in dimension). This would also be the area that would have to receive daily cover at the end of each workday. Assuming a 6-inch layer of soil is utilized (realistically, this daily cover soil layer would be closer to 12 inches in thickness given the irregularity of the waste surface) it would consume approximately 83 cubic yards of airspace each day, increasing the daily airspace utilization rate to 1,083 cubic feet. Daily cover in this example would represent almost 8% of the total landfill airspace.

That may not sound like much, but it is equivalent to airspace that could have received up 50 tons of waste in a single workday. With 312 workdays per year, this is equivalent to almost 15,600 tons of potential waste disposal lost to daily cover each year. Further assuming the landfill is of moderate size with a 20-year operational lifetime, the total disposal capacity utilized by daily cover would be equal to almost 312,000 tons of waste. Assuming a tipping fee of $30 per ton, this represents over $9 million in lost gross revenues over the lifetime of the landfill. In fact, landfills often have much higher percentages of their airspace volume given over to daily and intermediate cover soil, with some landfills being as high as 20%.

This doesn’t even factor in the equipment and operator costs required to place daily cover soil or the cost of the soil itself (assuming there is no convenient borrow source onsite). The time required for a dozer to spread and place daily cover soil can be up to two hours, depending on the size of the current working face. If the total cost per hour for equipment and operator to place daily cover is $70 per hour, the total daily operational costs associated with daily cover placement is $140 per day, equivalent to over $43,500 per year. These numbers alone should be justification enough for the use of alternate daily covers.

So what is needed is an easy-to-apply alternate daily cover (ADC) that does not take up a significant amount of potential disposal airspace. At first glance, such organic materials as yardwaste would make good candidates for ADC. Though easily placed and often already provided in the arriving wastestream, organic waste is usually forbidden by state regulations from being used as cover. Far from containing odors, the decomposition of organic waste gives off its own odors. Instead of serving as a barrier to disease vectors, organic waste can serve as a breeding ground. For these and other reasons, most states ban the use of organic materials (“putrescible waste”) as daily cover.

There are five general kinds of man-made ADC. These include: thin sheets of disposable film, reusable high-density polyethylene tarps, reusable heavy geotextiles, spray applications that utilize such nonorganic materials as chemicals and concrete, and spray foams that utilize pulped paper or other bulking agents.

Tarps and sheets can be manually or mechanically placed and can either be abandoned in place or rolled back again for reuse at the end of the next day. Disposable sheets are track-walked with a dozer at the start of the next work day to tear them up and prevent them from blocking the downward migration of leachate. Reusable tarps are used over and over again until they wear out.

However, tarps can be difficult to place, catching on sharp protrusions of the underlying waste as they are dragged into place. Even if a serious tear is avoided, general day-to-day abrasion can limit the lifetime of reusable tarps.

One example of a disposable tarp ADC system is Environmental Technology’s Enviro Cover System, a two-part system consisting of polyethylene film and application equipment for covering waste in landfills. It is a degradable polyethylene film. When it is used as an ADC, it is nonretrievable and does not require removal when the next lift of waste is placed. Enviro Cover occupies minimal volume and offers a wide range of benefits, including those of saving valuable waste disposal space and reducing soil-operating costs.

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Another example is Tarpomatic’s Automatic Tarping Machine (ATM), a patented, self-contained unit that attaches to heavy equipment to unroll and retrieve different types of fabric panels. Each ATM can be custom fitted to be transported and lifted by the blade of a dozer (or waste compactor) or the bucket of a front-end loader. The ATM can be readily attached and removed from the equipment as needed. The ATM uses a hydraulic-drive motor and engaging system to unwind and rewind the tarp spool at variable speeds, allowing easy placement over irregular surfaces.

The potential difficulties associated with the placing of tarps have given impetus to the use of spray-on foams and other sealants. One of the first spray-on ADCs was Landfill Service Corp.’s Posi-Shell, a mixture of shredded paper, polyester fiber, and cement kiln dust (later formulations would eliminate the paper component). Next Page >

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