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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What exactly does a landfill sell? What does a customer, disposing of his waste at the landfill, get in return for his $30 or so per ton? The obvious answer is that the landfill operator provides a service. According to the standard view, the service that the operator provides is an environmentally safe, politically acceptable, and economically viable means of permanently managing municipal solid waste. But the providing of services is open-ended, and is not dependent on available supplies of raw materials or finished products. In contrast, landfill operations are not forever. Instead, landfills actually sell a commodity of finite amount and limited availability. Every landfill eventually closes when it finally runs out of the commodity it is actually selling: airspace. The hard part is determining how much this commodity is worth.

Airspace and Profitability
Landfill operations are unique in many respects. They combine aspects of industrial manufacturing, mining operations, and construction sites. Furthermore, they have a relatively high break-even point resulting from very high initial fixed capital costs and relatively low variable unit operational costs (per ton of waste received) associated with the deposal of waste and subsequent environmental monitoring. These capital costs are related primarily to a landfill’s footprint. That is, landfill capital costs (aside from things like scales, access roads, fences, or maintenance buildings) are a result of how much area has to be excavated, lined with clay and geosynthetics, and eventually capped with similar materials.

To offset these fixed capital costs, a well-designed landfill should have as much disposal volume as possible within the landfill’s footprint. The design of the landfill disposal area will determine the all-important ratio of airspace (which determines profits) to area (which determines capital expenses). This is the basic metric for measuring landfill profitability. Not counting the potential disposal airspace below grade (depth of excavation is more function of hydrogeological site characteristics than anything else), the perfect shape for maximizing volume to base area is the pyramid.

A square base allows all the sides of the landfill to achieve maximum height, provided they have a consistent final grades slope. Rectangular or irregular landfill areas have their maximum heights determined by the shortest axial dimension. This limits the maximum potential height of the landfill and with it the landfills’ potential volume per acre of lined area. If a site’s property is elongated or otherwise affected by setbacks that would suggest a larger but less efficient landfill layout, the operator will have to choose between maximizing gross or net profits. The larger irregular landfill may have more volume (and thus generate more gross profits) than a smaller square landfill, but it will have fewer per-unit returns in investment.

Exchanging Tonnage for Cubic Yards
As odd as it sounds, landfill cash flow depends on tonnage, while landfill profitability depends upon airspace. The trick is to equate the two by making the conversion between tonnages at the gate and cubic yards of airspace in the landfill. The waste that gets hauled to the landfill in waste collection trucks gets measured after it enters the gates by driving over an in-ground truck scale. This measures the weight of the truck plus the weight of its waste load. After depositing its waste at the current working face, the now empty truck goes back over the truck scale and is re-weighed on its way out of the facility. This new measurement gives the weight of the truck only. The difference between these two weights is the weight of the waste delivered by the truck to the landfill.

In general, waste hauled to a landfill has a density of between 15 pounds per cubic foot to 25 pounds per cubic foot. This is the equivalent of 0.20 to 0.35 tons per cubic yard, thanks to the compaction of the collected waste inside the hauling truck itself—already approximately twice as dense as the waste had been when it was sitting on the street corner. The goal of the landfill operator is to reduce the volume of the deposited waste as much as possible by means of active compaction. Properly compacted waste can achieve another doubling of its density (and halving of its volume) as a result of compaction by heavy equipment at the working face where it is deposited. This results in an in-place waste density within the landfill of between 0.40 and 0.70 tons per cubic yard. Therefore, each ton of waste received by the landfill requires on average between 2.50 and 1.40 cubic yards of airspace.

For planning purposes, a typical rule of thumb would be an airspace utilization rate of 2 cubic yards per ton based on an assumed in-place density of 0.5 tons per cubic yard. If a landfill charges a typical tipping fee of $30 per ton, each wasted cubic yard of airspace is equal to $15 of lost gross revenue. Each lost acre-foot of airspace reduces gross revenue by $24,200. So, ironically, as improved compaction increases the value of a landfill, the same high rates of compaction make waste airspace potentially more costly.

Compaction is performed with specialized earthmoving equipment called landfill compactors. These landfill compactors are basically soil compactors modified for operating in the harsh environment of a landfill. They have been equipped with special extensions to their front dozer blade to contain low-density waste objects, protective shields to the undercarriage and the coolant system to prevent damage from sharp or blowing waste, and steel wheels with feet attachments designed not just to compact the waste but to shred it as well. Operative standards have been established that, when combined with field experience, determine the optimum number of passes with the compactor required to achieve maximum in-place density.

The act of compacting waste is still more art than science, despite a dozen studies by equipment manufacturers to determine those factors that affect compaction performance. Unlike soil, waste is very heterogeneous. So, unlike the compaction of earthen berms, the same compaction effort won’t always achieve the same results with waste. Otherwise, waste compaction should be considered as a construction activity. The landfill isn’t disposing of waste so much as it is using waste as a raw material to construct waste cells. Waste is placed in loose lifts typically 2 feet thick and compacted to a thickness of about 1 foot.

Specially designed compactor wheels are used to achieve this combination of shredding and compaction. The Caron Compactor Co. utilizes Pin-On Maximizer wheels that are interchangeable with standard Caterpillar 826G and 836H series compactors. Additionally, Caron provides BMAX pin-on teeth. They can be fitted to a wide range of compactors up to operational weights in excess of 120,000 pounds. Its dual-purpose tip is engineered to work with factory cleaner arrangements and axle protection guarding.

Terra Compactor Wheel supplies a wide variety of teeth and cleat patterns. The Terra Twist Torque is a six-sided rhomboid coercion cleat with opposing mirror-image surfaces. The right-hand and left-hand sides twist during compaction to achieve extreme reduction while being self-cleaning. Their modified steeple cleats come with an extreme-service rolling wire guard to prevent entanglement during operations.

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Daily waste cells are constructed of multiple waste lifts, one on top of the other until they reach a height between 8 and 12 feet. The areal extent of each waste cell is a function of the daily waste receipt, which determines the size of the landfill’s equipment fleet, which in turn determines the minimum-required area of the working face needed to safely and efficiently choreograph the equipment and the arriving waste collection trucks. Daily waste cells are covered with and delineated by daily and (when necessary) intermediate cover.

Subsequent waste cells are typically constructed adjacent to and overlapping the previously constructed cells. They are usually developed to the same elevation, until they completely cover the available floor space within the current landfill operational phase. This forms a layer of waste cells whose top surface creates a new floor for the next layer of waste cells. Layers consisting of individual daily waste cells are then constructed until all the available airspace defined by the current phase’s configuration is used up. Next Page >

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