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{{Short description|Gaseous fossil fuel}}
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'''Landfill gas''' is a mix of different gases created by the action of ]s within a ] as they decompose ], including for example, ] and ]. Landfill gas is approximately forty to sixty percent ], with the remainder being mostly ]. Trace amounts of other ] (VOCs) comprise the remainder (<1%). These trace gases include a large array of species, mainly simple ]s.<ref name=Ullmann>Hans-Jürgen Ehrig, Hans-Joachim Schneider and Volkmar Gossow "Waste, 7. Deposition" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry, 2011, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. {{doi|10.1002/14356007.o28_o07}}</ref>


Landfill gases have an influence on ]. The major components are ] and ], both of which are ]es. Methane in the atmosphere is a far more potent greenhouse gas, with each molecule having twenty-five times the effect of a molecule of carbon dioxide. Methane itself however accounts for less composition of the atmosphere than does carbon dioxide. Landfills are the third-largest source of methane in the US.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www3.epa.gov/climatechange/ghgemissions/gases/ch4.html|title=Methane Emissions|date=23 December 2015|publisher=Environmental Protection Agency|access-date=13 June 2016}}</ref>


Because of the significant negative effects of these gases, regulatory regimes have been set up to ], reduce the amount of ] in ], and to create ] strategies, which include ] or capture for electricity generation.
A '''new page''' is distinguished from a page: the latter has a ]. However, creating a new page is just like editing a blank page, except that the message that is in ] appears, which can be different per project.


==Production==
For general editing matters, in particular the ] of the ], see ].
Landfill gases are the result of three processes:<ref name=Ullmann/>
# ] of volatile organic compounds (e.g., solvents)
# ]s between waste components
# ], especially ].
The first two depend strongly on the nature of the waste. The dominant process in most landfills is the third process whereby ] decompose organic waste to produce ], which consists of methane and carbon dioxide together with traces of other compounds.<ref name="EIA Landfill Gas">{{cite web |title = Landfill Gas and Biogas|publisher = U.S. Energy Information Administration|url = http://www.eia.gov/Energyexplained/?page=biomass_biogas |access-date = 2015-11-22}}</ref> Despite the heterogeneity of waste, the evolution of gases follows well defined ]. Formation of methane and CO<sub>2</sub> commences about six months after depositing the landfill material. The evolution of gas reaches a maximum at about 20 years, then declines over the course of decades.<ref name=Ullmann/>


Conditions and changes within the landfill can be observed with ] (ERT) to detect sources of landfill gas,<ref>Deep Scan Tech (2022): .</ref> and leachate movements and pathways.<ref>Deep Scan Tech (2022): .</ref> Conditions at different locations, such as temperature, moisture levels and fraction of biodegradable material can be inferred and this information can be used to improve gas production with optimal well locations over hotspots and interventions such as heap irrigation.


When landfill gas permeates through a soil cover, a fraction of the ] in the gas is oxidized microbially to ].<ref>Scheutz, C., Kjeldsen, P., Bogner, J.E., De Visscher, A., Gebert, J., Hilger, H.A. & Spokas, K. (2009) Microbial methane oxidation processes and technologies for mitigation of landfill gas emissions. Waste Manage. Res. 27:409-455.</ref>


==Monitoring==
== General principles ==
{{Main|Landfill gas monitoring}}
* ''']''' to see whether someone has written a similar page before you start one yourself.
Because gases produced by landfills are both valuable and sometimes hazardous, monitoring techniques have been developed. Flame ionization detectors can be used to measure methane levels as well as total VOC levels. Surface monitoring and sub-surface monitoring as well as monitoring of the ambient air is carried out. In the U.S., under the Clean Air Act of 1990, it is required that many large landfills install gas collection and control systems, which means that at the very least the facilities must collect and ].
* Review conventions of the project you are working in regarding e.g.:
**the naming; see also ].
**whether a separate page is justified; perhaps it is better to add the text to a related page (especially if the text is not very long); that page can always be split later after it has grown.


U.S. Federal regulations under Subtitle D of RCRA formed in October 1979 regulate the siting, design, construction, operation, monitoring, and closure of MSW landfills. Subtitle D now requires controls on the migration of methane in landfill gas. Monitoring requirements must be met at landfills during their operation, and for an additional 30 years after. The landfills affected by Subtitle D of RCRA are required to control gas by establishing a way to check for ] periodically and therefore prevent off-site migration. Landfill owners and operators must make sure the concentration of methane gas does not exceed 25% of the LEL for methane in the facilities' structures and the LEL for methane at the facility boundary.<ref>{{cite web|title=Landfill Gas Control Measures|publisher=Agency for Toxic Substances & Disease Registry|url=http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/hac/landfill/html/ch5.html|access-date=2010-04-26}}</ref>
==Starting a page through the URL==
The URL corresponding to a non-existing page gives a webpage like that of an existing page, showing the text that is in ].


==Use==
It has the usual edit link, which allows you to create the page.
]
] evaporation system]]
{{Main|Landfill gas utilization}}
The gases produced within a landfill can be collected and used in various ways. The landfill gas can be utilized directly on-site by a boiler or any type of combustion system, providing heat. Electricity can also be generated on-site through the use of microturbines, steam turbines, or fuel cells.<ref>{{cite web |last=Sullivan |first=Patrick |title=The Importance of Landfill Gas Capture and Utilization in the U.S |url=http://www.scsengineers.com/Papers/Sullivan_Importance_of_LFG_Capture_and_Utilization_in_the_US.pdf |publisher=SUR |access-date=27 September 2013}}</ref> The landfill gas can also be sold off-site and sent into natural gas pipelines. This approach requires the gas to be processed into pipeline quality, e.g., by removing various contaminants and components.<ref>{{cite web |title=Landfill Gas Power Plants |url=http://www.energy.ca.gov/biomass/landfill_gas.html |publisher=California Energy Commission |access-date=27 September 2013}}</ref> Landfill gas can also be used to evaporate leachate, another byproduct of the landfill process. This application displaces another fuel that was previously used for the same thing.<ref>{{cite web |title=Landfill Methane Outreach program |url=http://www.epa.gov/lmop/basic-info/index.html |access-date=27 September 2013 |publisher=EPA}}</ref>


The efficiency of gas collection at landfills directly impacts the amount of energy that can be recovered - closed landfills (those no longer accepting waste) collect gas more efficiently than open landfills (those that are still accepting waste). A comparison of collection efficiency at closed and open landfills found about a 17 percentage point difference between the two.<ref>{{Cite journal|title = Estimates of solid waste disposal rates and reduction targets for landfill gas emissions|journal = Nature Climate Change|date = 2015-09-21|issn = 1758-6798|volume = advance online publication|issue = 2|pages = 162–165|doi = 10.1038/nclimate2804|language = en|first1 = Jon T.|last1 = Powell|first2 = Timothy G.|last2 = Townsend|first3 = Julie B.|last3 = Zimmerman}}</ref>
Thus a "broken link" from within or outside the project is, in a way, not really broken, as long as the first part of it is correct.


===Opposition===
An easy way to produce the URL is editing the last part of the URL of another page in the same project.
Capture and use of landfill gas can be expensive. Some environmental groups claim that the projects do not produce "renewable power" because trash (their source) is not renewable. The ] opposes government subsidies for such projects.<ref name="Koch">{{cite news|last=Koch|first=Wendy|date=2010-02-25|title=Landfill Projects on the rise|publisher=USA Today|url=https://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/energy/2010-02-24-landfill-energy_N.htm|access-date=2010-04-25}}</ref> The ] (NRDC) argues that government incentives should be directed more towards solar, wind, and energy-efficiency efforts.<ref name="Koch"/>


==Safety==
An ] to a non-existing page (not recommended) gives the same result.
Landfill gas emissions can lead to ], ] and ] problems in the landfill.<ref>Brosseau, J. (1994) Trace gas compound emissions from municipal landfill sanitary sites; Atmospheric-Environment 28 (2), 285-293</ref><ref>Christensen, T. H., Cossu, R. & Stegmann, R. (1999) Landfilling of waste: Biogas</ref> Several accidents have occurred, for example at ], England in 1986,<ref>Williams and Aitkenhead (1991) Lessons from Loscoe: The uncontrolled migration of landfill gas; The Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology 24 (2), 191-207</ref> where migrating landfill gas accumulated and partially destroyed a property. An accident causing two deaths occurred from an explosion in a house adjacent to Skellingsted landfill in Denmark in 1991.<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www2.mst.dk/common/Udgivramme/Frame.asp?pg=http://www2.mst.dk/Udgiv/publikationer/2001/87-7944-831-3/html/kap30.htm
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110722055429/https://www2.mst.dk/common/Udgivramme/Frame.asp?pg=http://www2.mst.dk/Udgiv/publikationer/2001/87-7944-831-3/html/kap30.htm
|archive-date=July 22, 2011
|language=da
|title=Danish EPA
|website=mst.dk
| date=23 July 2006 }}</ref> Due to the risk presented by landfill gas, there is a clear need to monitor gas produced by landfills. In addition to the risk of fire and explosion, gas migration in the subsurface can result in contact with landfill gas with ]. This, in turn, can result in contamination of groundwater by organic compounds present in nearly all landfill gas.<ref>Kerfoot, H.B., Chapter 3.5 In Christensen, T. H., Cossu, R. & Stegmann, R. (1999)Landfilling of waste: Biogas</ref>


Although usually evolved only in trace amounts, landfills do release some ] and ]s.
To get access to a MediaWiki project with all the links at the edges, but without superfluous loading of any page, you can bookmark a non-existing page.


], due to pressure differentials and diffusion, can occur. This can create an explosion hazard if the gas reaches sufficiently high concentrations in adjacent buildings.
{{hc}}


== By country ==
]

]
=== Brazil ===
]
{{Excerpt|Landfill gas emission reduction in Brazil}}

=== United States ===
{{Excerpt|Landfills_in_the_United_States|Landfill gas utilization}}

==See also==
{{Portal|Biology|Technology|Environment|Renewable energy}}
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]

==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}

==External links==
* GA Mansoori, N Enayati, LB Agyarko (2016), , World Sci. Pub. Co., {{ISBN|978-981-4704-00-7}}
* {{cite web|title=Primer on Landfill Gas as "Green Energy"|publisher=Energy Justice Network|url=http://www.energyjustice.net/lfg/|access-date=2010-04-25}}
* {{cite news|title=Landfill Projects on the rise|publisher=USA Today|url=https://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/energy/2010-02-24-landfill-energy_N.htm|access-date=2010-04-25 | first=Wendy | last=Koch | date=2010-02-25}}
* {{cite web|title=Landfill Gas to Energy|publisher=Waste Management|url=http://www.thinkgreen.com/landfill-gas-to-energy|access-date=2010-04-26}}
* {{cite web|title=Landfill Gas|publisher=Gas Separation Technology LLC|url=http://www.gassep.com/lfg.htm|access-date=2010-04-26|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170506142646/http://www.gassep.com/lfg.htm|archive-date=2017-05-06|url-status=dead}}
* {{cite web|title=Landfill Gas Control Measures|publisher=Agency for Toxic Substances & Disease Registry|url=http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/hac/landfill/html/ch5.html|access-date=2010-04-26}}

{{waste|state=collapsed}}
{{fuel gas|state=collapsed}}
{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Landfill Gas}}
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 06:26, 22 December 2024

Gaseous fossil fuel
A gas flare produced by a landfill in Lake County, Ohio

Landfill gas is a mix of different gases created by the action of microorganisms within a landfill as they decompose organic waste, including for example, food waste and paper waste. Landfill gas is approximately forty to sixty percent methane, with the remainder being mostly carbon dioxide. Trace amounts of other volatile organic compounds (VOCs) comprise the remainder (<1%). These trace gases include a large array of species, mainly simple hydrocarbons.

Landfill gases have an influence on climate change. The major components are CO2 and methane, both of which are greenhouse gases. Methane in the atmosphere is a far more potent greenhouse gas, with each molecule having twenty-five times the effect of a molecule of carbon dioxide. Methane itself however accounts for less composition of the atmosphere than does carbon dioxide. Landfills are the third-largest source of methane in the US.

Because of the significant negative effects of these gases, regulatory regimes have been set up to monitor landfill gas, reduce the amount of biodegradable content in municipal waste, and to create landfill gas utilization strategies, which include gas flaring or capture for electricity generation.

Production

Landfill gases are the result of three processes:

  1. evaporation of volatile organic compounds (e.g., solvents)
  2. chemical reactions between waste components
  3. microbial action, especially methanogenesis.

The first two depend strongly on the nature of the waste. The dominant process in most landfills is the third process whereby anaerobic bacteria decompose organic waste to produce biogas, which consists of methane and carbon dioxide together with traces of other compounds. Despite the heterogeneity of waste, the evolution of gases follows well defined kinetic pattern. Formation of methane and CO2 commences about six months after depositing the landfill material. The evolution of gas reaches a maximum at about 20 years, then declines over the course of decades.

Conditions and changes within the landfill can be observed with electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) to detect sources of landfill gas, and leachate movements and pathways. Conditions at different locations, such as temperature, moisture levels and fraction of biodegradable material can be inferred and this information can be used to improve gas production with optimal well locations over hotspots and interventions such as heap irrigation.

When landfill gas permeates through a soil cover, a fraction of the methane in the gas is oxidized microbially to CO2.

Monitoring

Main article: Landfill gas monitoring

Because gases produced by landfills are both valuable and sometimes hazardous, monitoring techniques have been developed. Flame ionization detectors can be used to measure methane levels as well as total VOC levels. Surface monitoring and sub-surface monitoring as well as monitoring of the ambient air is carried out. In the U.S., under the Clean Air Act of 1990, it is required that many large landfills install gas collection and control systems, which means that at the very least the facilities must collect and flare the gas.

U.S. Federal regulations under Subtitle D of RCRA formed in October 1979 regulate the siting, design, construction, operation, monitoring, and closure of MSW landfills. Subtitle D now requires controls on the migration of methane in landfill gas. Monitoring requirements must be met at landfills during their operation, and for an additional 30 years after. The landfills affected by Subtitle D of RCRA are required to control gas by establishing a way to check for methane emissions periodically and therefore prevent off-site migration. Landfill owners and operators must make sure the concentration of methane gas does not exceed 25% of the LEL for methane in the facilities' structures and the LEL for methane at the facility boundary.

Use

Landfill gas collection system
Leachate evaporation system
Main article: Landfill gas utilization

The gases produced within a landfill can be collected and used in various ways. The landfill gas can be utilized directly on-site by a boiler or any type of combustion system, providing heat. Electricity can also be generated on-site through the use of microturbines, steam turbines, or fuel cells. The landfill gas can also be sold off-site and sent into natural gas pipelines. This approach requires the gas to be processed into pipeline quality, e.g., by removing various contaminants and components. Landfill gas can also be used to evaporate leachate, another byproduct of the landfill process. This application displaces another fuel that was previously used for the same thing.

The efficiency of gas collection at landfills directly impacts the amount of energy that can be recovered - closed landfills (those no longer accepting waste) collect gas more efficiently than open landfills (those that are still accepting waste). A comparison of collection efficiency at closed and open landfills found about a 17 percentage point difference between the two.

Opposition

Capture and use of landfill gas can be expensive. Some environmental groups claim that the projects do not produce "renewable power" because trash (their source) is not renewable. The Sierra Club opposes government subsidies for such projects. The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) argues that government incentives should be directed more towards solar, wind, and energy-efficiency efforts.

Safety

Landfill gas emissions can lead to environmental, hygiene and security problems in the landfill. Several accidents have occurred, for example at Loscoe, England in 1986, where migrating landfill gas accumulated and partially destroyed a property. An accident causing two deaths occurred from an explosion in a house adjacent to Skellingsted landfill in Denmark in 1991. Due to the risk presented by landfill gas, there is a clear need to monitor gas produced by landfills. In addition to the risk of fire and explosion, gas migration in the subsurface can result in contact with landfill gas with groundwater. This, in turn, can result in contamination of groundwater by organic compounds present in nearly all landfill gas.

Although usually evolved only in trace amounts, landfills do release some aromatics and chlorocarbons.

Landfill gas migration, due to pressure differentials and diffusion, can occur. This can create an explosion hazard if the gas reaches sufficiently high concentrations in adjacent buildings.

By country

Brazil

This section is an excerpt from Landfill gas emission reduction in Brazil. Brazil has established a strong public policy using Clean Development Mechanism Projects to reduce methane emissions from landfills. An important component of these projects is the sale of avoided emissions by the private market to generate revenue.

United States

This section is an excerpt from Landfills in the United States § Landfill gas utilization.
JFK Presidential Library and Museum - category 3 landfill post-closure site

A United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) report indicates that as of 2016, counts of operational municipal solid waste landfills range between 1,900 and 2,000. In a nationwide study done by the Environmental Research and Education Foundation in 2013, only 1,540 operational municipal solid waste landfills were counted throughout the United States. Decomposing waste in these landfills produces landfill gas, which is a mixture of about half methane and half carbon dioxide. Landfills are the third-largest source of methane emissions in the United States, with municipal solid waste landfills representing 95 percent of this fraction.

In the U.S., the number of landfill gas projects increased from 399 in 2005, to 594 in 2012 according to the Environmental Protection Agency. These projects are popular because they control energy costs and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. These projects collect the methane gas and treat it, so it can be used for electricity or upgraded to pipeline-grade gas. (Methane gas has twenty-one times the global warming potential of carbon dioxide). For example, in the U.S., Waste Management uses landfill gas as an energy source at 110 landfill gas-to-energy facilities. This energy production offsets almost two million tons of coal per year, creating energy equivalent to that needed by four hundred thousand homes. These projects also reduce greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere.

The EPA, which estimates that hundreds of landfills could support gas to energy projects, has also established the Landfill Methane Outreach Program. This program was developed to reduce methane emissions from landfills in a cost-effective manner by encouraging the development of environmentally and economically beneficial landfill gas-to-energy projects.

See also

References

  1. ^ Hans-Jürgen Ehrig, Hans-Joachim Schneider and Volkmar Gossow "Waste, 7. Deposition" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry, 2011, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. doi:10.1002/14356007.o28_o07
  2. "Methane Emissions". Environmental Protection Agency. 23 December 2015. Retrieved 13 June 2016.
  3. "Landfill Gas and Biogas". U.S. Energy Information Administration. Retrieved 2015-11-22.
  4. Deep Scan Tech (2022): Deep Scan Tech supports Ukraine in improving its energy independence.
  5. Deep Scan Tech (2022): Deep Scan Tech helps landfills protect the environment with a demonstration project in Ukraine.
  6. Scheutz, C., Kjeldsen, P., Bogner, J.E., De Visscher, A., Gebert, J., Hilger, H.A. & Spokas, K. (2009) Microbial methane oxidation processes and technologies for mitigation of landfill gas emissions. Waste Manage. Res. 27:409-455.
  7. "Landfill Gas Control Measures". Agency for Toxic Substances & Disease Registry. Retrieved 2010-04-26.
  8. Sullivan, Patrick. "The Importance of Landfill Gas Capture and Utilization in the U.S" (PDF). SUR. Retrieved 27 September 2013.
  9. "Landfill Gas Power Plants". California Energy Commission. Retrieved 27 September 2013.
  10. "Landfill Methane Outreach program". EPA. Retrieved 27 September 2013.
  11. Powell, Jon T.; Townsend, Timothy G.; Zimmerman, Julie B. (2015-09-21). "Estimates of solid waste disposal rates and reduction targets for landfill gas emissions". Nature Climate Change. advance online publication (2): 162–165. doi:10.1038/nclimate2804. ISSN 1758-6798.
  12. ^ Koch, Wendy (2010-02-25). "Landfill Projects on the rise". USA Today. Retrieved 2010-04-25.
  13. Brosseau, J. (1994) Trace gas compound emissions from municipal landfill sanitary sites; Atmospheric-Environment 28 (2), 285-293
  14. Christensen, T. H., Cossu, R. & Stegmann, R. (1999) Landfilling of waste: Biogas
  15. Williams and Aitkenhead (1991) Lessons from Loscoe: The uncontrolled migration of landfill gas; The Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology 24 (2), 191-207
  16. "Danish EPA". mst.dk (in Danish). 23 July 2006. Archived from the original on July 22, 2011.
  17. Kerfoot, H.B., Chapter 3.5 In Christensen, T. H., Cossu, R. & Stegmann, R. (1999)Landfilling of waste: Biogas
  18. "Basic Information about Landfill Gas - US EPA". US EPA. 15 April 2016.
  19. "Inventory of US Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks, 1990-2015" (PDF). United States Environmental Protection Agency. 2017. Retrieved 2022-04-04.
  20. "Landfill Gas to Energy". EPA. Retrieved 2012-07-29.
  21. Koch, Wendy (2010-02-25). "Landfill Projects on the rise". USA Today. Retrieved 2010-04-25.
  22. "Landfill Gas to Energy". Waste Management. Retrieved 2010-04-26.
  23. "Landfill Gas". Gas Separation Technology LLC. Archived from the original on 2017-05-06. Retrieved 2010-04-26.

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