Daily Schedule:
8:00am - Registration and coffee
8:30am - Session begins
4:30pm - Adjournment
Breakfast, two refreshment breaks and lunch are provided daily.
Description
Potential problems associated with the operation of landfills highly concern the public. Examples of these problems include landfill gas and leachate migration which can result in odours, groundwater contamination, escape and ignition of greenhouse and combustible gases, and landfill settlement and failures. These problems can occur during operations as well as during closure and post-closure periods. To optimize the design and operation of these sites, the designer and landfill manager must understand the mechanisms of protection, movement, monitoring and control of leachate and gas. Good practice in planning, design, implementation and management will result in better long-term performance of landfills. This course focuses on optimizing performance of landfills from design to post-closure phases and deals comprehensively with the topics of concern to landfill designers and managers.
Objective
To provide participants with design and planning fundamentals, implementation, operation, closure and post-closure methods which will enhance and extend the performance of landfills.
Target Audience
Solid waste managers, environmental and municipal engineers, landfill managers and supervisors, consultants, regulatory personnel, and technical specialists involved in the operation of sanitary landfills.
Christian Felske
Dr. Christian Felske is a General Supervisor, Environment, Research & Regulatory with the Waste Management Branch of the City of Edmonton and an Assistant Adjunct Professor at the Civil & Environmental Engineering Department at the University of Alberta. He received his Civil Engineering Diploma and his Ph.D. in Solid Waste Management from the University of Essen in Germany. Prior to moving to Canada, Dr. Felske was a project engineer with the AGR mbH (Abfallentsorgungs-Gesellschaft Ruhrgebiet mbH-Waste Management Company of the Ruhr Region) in Essen, Germany from 1999 to 2003. During that time he was involved in the design and operation of several landfills, composting plants and biogas/waste to energy plants in the Ruhr Region in Germany. From 2003 to 2009 Dr. Felske worked as a Research Scientist in the Waste Management Technologies program at the Alberta Research Council during which he lead several landfill gas biofiltration/ bioreactor and waste to energy projects. In his current role with the Waste Management Branch of the City of Edmonton Dr. Felske is responsible for managing the Branch’s interactions with regulators, also acting as the Branch’s Environmental Manager to monitor, maintain, and improve the Branch’s ISO 14001 certified environmental management system, and for providing technical and scientific expertise to Branch project managers through development, facilitation, and support of the Branch’s Research & Development activities.
Day I:
Landfill Basics
- Landfill Concepts
- Landfilling in a Global Context
Landfill Engineering
- Solid Waste Master Plan
- Landfill Siting Tools
- Landfill Infrastructure
Landfill Liners
- Containment Systems
- Base Liner Purpose and Design
- Cover Liner Purpose and Design
Leachate Generation and Control
- Leachate Quality and Quantity
- HELP Model for Leachate Generation Modelling
- Leachate Collection Infrastructure and Design
Day II:
Landfill Gas Generation and Control
- Landfill Gas Basics
- Landfill Gas Quality and Quantity
- Landfill Gas Collection Infrastructure and Design
Enhanced Landfill Gas Management and Greenhouse Gas Basics
- Bioreactor Landfills
- Methane Oxidation Systems for Medium and Small Landfills
- Greenhouse Gas Management for Landfills
- Tools for Landfill Gas and Greenhouse Gas Emission Modelling
Hands-On Exercise: Using Landfill Gas/ Greenhouse Gas Generation and Emissions Models
The participants will have an opportunity to work with current models to predict the generation and emissions of landfill and greenhouse gases from small, medium and larger landfills with and without landfill gas collection and utilization infrastructure including the following:
- Model Input Parameters
- Sensitivity Analysis Landfill Caps
- Data Interpretation
Environmental Landfill Monitoring
- Groundwater and Surface Water Monitoring
- Landfill Gas Subsurface Monitoring
- Air Quality and Odour Management
GIC reserves the right to cancel or change the date or location of its events. GIC's
responsibility will, under no circumstances, exceed the amount of the fee collected.
GIC is not responsible for the purchase of non-refundable travel arrangements or
accommodations or the cancellation/change fees associated with cancelling them.
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and accommodations. Please click here for complete policies.
Global Innovative Campus
17818 -107 Ave NW
Edmonton, AB
T5S 1J1
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