Life-Cycle
Inventory and Impact Evaluation of Mining
Municipal Solid Waste Landfills
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Abstract
Recent research and policy directives
have emerged with a focus
on sustainable management of waste materials, and the mining of old
landfills represents an opportunity to meet sustainability goals by
reducing the release of liquid- and gas-phase contaminants into the
environment, recovering land for more productive use, and recovering
energy from the landfilled materials. The emissions associated with
the landfill mining process (waste excavation, screening, and on-site
transportation) were inventoried on the basis of diesel fuel consumption
data from two full-scale mining projects (1.3–1.5 L/in-place
m<sup>3</sup> of landfill space mined) and unit emissions (mass per
liter of diesel consumption) from heavy equipment typically deployed
for mining landfills. An analytical framework was developed and used
in an assessment of the life-cycle environmental impacts of a few
end-use management options for materials deposited and mined from
an unlined landfill. The results showed that substantial greenhouse
gas emission reductions can be realized in both the waste relocation
and materials and energy recovery scenarios compared to a “do
nothing” case. The recovery of metal components from landfilled
waste was found to have the greatest benefit across nearly all impact
categories evaluated, while emissions associated with heavy equipment
to mine the waste itself were found to be negligible compared to the
benefits that mining provided