DEP approves air quality plan for Westmoreland Sanitary Landfill
The state Department of Environmental Protection this week approved an air quality plan to allow an onsite leachate treatment and evaporation system to be installed at Westmoreland Sanitary Landfill in Rostraver Township.
The air quality plan approval establishes emissions limitations and monitoring requirements, and the DEP is currently reviewing a waste permit modification application, which, if approved, would authorize the use of the evaporator system for the treatment of the landfill’s leachate.
Both the plan approval and waste permit modification must be obtained prior to operation.
The plan approval Monday is in response to a Nov. 1 consent order and agreement between the DEP and Westmoreland Sanitary Landfill that requires the dump’s operators to take extensive proactive measures to detect, correct and prevent future violations.
“DEP carefully and thoroughly reviewed the application while also considering feedback from the public,” DEP Southwest Regional Director Jim Miller said. “This authorization meets or exceeds the air quality regulations and includes a number of safeguards and conditions to be protective of public health and the environment.”
Leachate is moisture which is produced by waste itself and stormwater that infiltrates the landfill’s waste. Leachate from landfills must be treated onsite or transported to a separate treatment facility. Evaporating liquid leachate at Westmoreland Sanitary Landfill would eliminate risks of spills, impacts, and traffic associated with trucking leachate offsite for disposal.
The approved leachate treatment and evaporation system includes extensive pre-treatment of the leachate. The evaporator will include a three-stage demisting filtration system with a 99% removal efficiency of filterable particulate matter. The air quality plan approval also includes numerous measures to monitor pollutants that may be emitted through the evaporation process and/or present in the leachate and assure compliance with emission limitations.
Modeling and calculations using accepted scientific methods show any radionuclides emitted into the air will not pose a health risk. Radiation monitors will be placed in six onsite locations and will measure 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and be analyzed regularly.
The plan approval also requires that a third-party conduct an audit inspection of the leachate pre-treatment and evaporation system every 12 months. Audits would include a full system inspection, cleaning, instrument calibration, training of operating staff, operator certification and system restoration, as needed.