From Brownfields to Brightfields
By Chris Nelson, SCS Engineers
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 Brownfield sites, including closed landfills, sometimes also referred to as legacy landfills, are financial liabilities to their owners whether they be a municipality, a county or the former operators or owners of the site. The owners of such sites may never see an end to the perpetual monitoring requirements mandated by federal and state laws governing solid waste disposal facilities. Monitoring costs are derived from such activities as groundwater and gas probe monitoring; upgrades, repairs or maintenance to landfill gas and leachate collection systems; and maintenance, monitoring or repair of final cover systems, including potentially expensive erosion control. In this challenging economy, it may be more difficult to convince developers to build new construction on closed landfill sites. Despite these challenges, closed or legacy landfills can also be positive attributes to a community or owner wanting to take advantage of a large platform for producing alternative energy. Wind farms, the capture of landfill gas (methane) and conversion to electricity (known as landfill gas to energy or LFGE) or solar farms are all excellent uses for legacy landfills.
Many old landfills and brownfield sites are located near urban areas with adequately developed utility infrastructure. With electrical lines nearby, close-in Brownfields and legacy landfills can more efficiently produce and transmit power to areas in need of renewable energy supplies and less investment in costly utility infrastructure will be required.
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Industry Profiles
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Amy Steinmetz Petroleum Brownfields Coordinator, Montana DEQ Montana |
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Rick Booth National Leader for Finance, Insurance, Real Estate, and Legal Market Sector, Golder Associates Inc. St. Louis, Mo. |
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Paul Arnold, PE Principal and Brownfields Initiative Leader, TRC Cos. Lowell, Mass. |
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Count On It
 28 percent approximate amount of all energy used in the Unites States for transporting people and goods from one place to another.
Source U.S. Department of Energy
 200-300 estimated number of hydrogen-fueled vehicles in the United States today
Source U.S. Department of Energy
 9,783,000 number of barrels of crude oil the United States imports each day.
Source U.S. Department of Energy
 1 million number of gallons of fresh water that can be contaminated from the used oil from one oil change.
Source U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
 20 million number of people that celebrated the first Earth Day on Aril 22, 1970.
Source U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
 $2.3 billion amount President Obama awarded for clean energy manufacturing projects across the United States
Source U.S. Department of Energy
 509 approximate number of operational landfill gas (LFG) energy projects currently in the United States. LFG electricity generation projects provide the energy equivalent of powering more than 920,000 homes annually
Source U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
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