IMIESA January 2021

Page 30

SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT

Tshwane ready to up its waste game In the last three years, the City of Tshwane has closed the Derdepoor t, Valhalla, Temba, Kwaggasrand, and Garstkloof landfill sites. With only four sites still operational, the metro has seen a rise in illegal dumping over the years; however, planned strategies are in place to curb this. By Nombulelo Manyana

S

peaking at the IWMSA’s Waste Crisis in Gauteng seminar in 2020, Abel Malaka, head: Waste Management Department, City of Tshwane, said the city is focusing on initiatives that will secure waste disposal facilities for better waste management in Tshwane. These include the acquisition of private landfill site airspace, alternative waste treatment, as well as landfill site closure plans and alternative landfills.

Closure plans and alternative landfills Malaka indicated that four sites have been identified and recommended for feasibility studies for new landfill sites. For the city’s existing Temba, Onderstepoort, Kwaggasrand and Garstkloof landfill sites, a closure application has been submitted to the Gauteng Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (GDARD) for consideration. The sites will now alternatively be used as a garden waste site or waste transfer station, where municipal solid waste is temporarily held and sorted before heading to a landfill or waste-to-energy plant. Garbage trucks that run city routes drop off their trash here before it’s loaded on to larger vehicles and shipped off.

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IMIESA January 2021

The Onderstepoort landfill is also in the process of submitting a final report for closure, also for consideration by the GDARD. It will be used as either a garden waste site, transfer station or rubble crushing plant. Another consideration is turning it into a materials recovery and energy facility, which will receive recyclable materials and then use a combination of equipment and manual labour to separate and densify materials in preparation for shipment to end-user manufacturers. Kwaggasrand is already being used as a materials recovery facility, while the Garstkloof landfill site will be used as a rubble crushing plant and waste sorting facility.

Alternative waste treatment Malaka said the acquisition of airspace is a short-term solution for the city, which is currently in negotiations with private landfill owners for the outright purchase of airspace. Faced with dwindling landfill space for waste disposal, the Gauteng Infrastructure Financing Agency (GIFA) was appointed in March 2015 to conduct a feasibility study into alternative waste treatment methodologies. GIFA and the City of Tshwane signed a memorandum of understanding on the project in May 2016 and, upon completion of the feasibility study, GIFA recommended a waste-

to-energy plant for Pretoria West power station and Rooiwal. The city will be approaching private energy companies to convert Pretoria West coal power station into an incinerator, based on the outcome of the feasibility study. The city is also expected to announce large waste-to-energy projects for its landfill sites and wastewater facilities.

Improving landfill site compliance Tshwane was recently labelled as having some of the most non-compliant landfill sites in the country. Three of Tshwane’s landfill and waste disposal sites faced imminent closure in 2019 due to non-compliance with the conditions of the permits/licences under which they operate. Malaka said the city is developing an action plan to ensure compliance and is doing an audit report on landfill sites conducted by the department. An airspace assessment and financial provision report has been completed. In addition, the city appointed a panel of service providers to undertake surface water and groundwater monitoring, as well as an independent external audit, which has advanced a report to motivate for external landfill site operations and management.


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Minor concrete defects and their remedies

4min
pages 50-52

Experts in bespoke culverts

3min
page 53

Construction Law

7min
pages 48-49

Towards a water secure future

3min
page 47

Innovative use of builders’ rubble

2min
page 46

Bell beefs up excavator range

2min
page 43

Constructing for and with the community

5min
pages 44-45

The right equipment, the best support

6min
pages 36-37

Built to keep on performing

1min
page 39

Planers at the cutting edge

3min
page 35

The importance of postclosure management

2min
pages 32-33

Tshwane ready to up its waste game

3min
page 30

Hot Seat

6min
pages 28-29

4IR in the waste sector

2min
page 31

Why you should hire from CHPA members

1min
page 34

Meeting demand for high grade bitumen

2min
page 26

NME innovations for Africa

2min
page 27

Environmental Engineering

4min
pages 24-25

Understanding your water consumption

3min
page 20

Behind the scenes of the Kashimbila Multipurpose Dam

6min
pages 14-15

Financing

5min
pages 10-11

Cover Story

6min
pages 12-13

Editor’s comment

4min
pages 5-6

Automatic control valves regulate the levels

3min
pages 16-17

President’s comment

2min
page 7

Upgrading the Midmar WTP

2min
pages 21-22
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