The white trailer blends into the winter landscape at SKB Environmental’s landfill in Rosemount, but inside, machinery is working to capture one of the most pervasive environmental pollutants of our time.
The landfill is the final stop for industrial waste, incinerator ash and demolition garbage, where all of that material is mixed into massive, lined cells. Like in every landfill, moisture in the trash that’s trucked in mixes with rainfall and collects into a polluted soup known as leachate.
SKB is experimenting with filtering PFAS chemicals out of that liquid. The leachate is pumped inside the trailer, where it travels through several tanks that repeatedly froth it up. These chemicals bubble into a super-concentrated foam – much like soap. Then that foam is siphoned off, and the cleaned water continues to a sewage plant.
PFAS, or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, are thousands of chemicals used to make everything from nonstick frying pans to stain-resistant clothing and carpets; it’s even used to snuff out dangerous fires. The chemicals’ almost unbreakable carbon-fluorine bonds make them useful, but also ensure they don’t break down. They have been found to persist in the environment across the globe, including in the bodies of people and animals.
Growing research shows that these chemicals are toxic, linked to some cancers and reproductive, developmental and immune system issues.
In the past few years, regulation of these chemicals is finally starting to catch up to the danger – the EPA set new limits for six PFAS in drinking water last year, and private startups are racing to find a way to destroy them. But decades’ worth of the compounds are sitting in landfills right now – presenting a contaminant to manage for waste handlers who didn’t create the pollution, but now find themselves awash in it.
Researchers are still trying to understand whether the chemicals are also escaping into the air, via gasses from landfills, aeration in wastewater treatment and the emissions from incinerators, said Detlef Knappe, a professor of environmental engineering at North Carolina State University.
A few waste companies are trying to get ahead of the curve. Ryan O’Gara, government affairs manager at SKB, said the company is expecting a future where new regulations would force the waste industry to reckon with the PFAS flowing through it.