After the Cape Town Market tour, the waste enthusiasts were taken to the Athlone Refuse Transfer Station (ARTS) and Vissershok Landfill to experience, first-hand, how waste is managed by the City of Cape Town. Where distances for refuse collection vehicles are too great to access disposal, they make use of a transfer station to offload waste. At transfer stations, the waste is compacted into containers of approximately 20 tons each and transferred via rail or road to a landfill site. Approximately 50 containers of compacted waste are transported every night via rail from ARTS to the Vissershok landfill site.
At the Vissershok Landfill, the attendees were taken to the working face, rehabilitated cells and the leachate treatment plant where leachate generated by the site is biologically treated to meet the Department of Water and Sanitations Special Limit effluent standards.“South Africa is running out of landfill airspace and we all need to do our part to reduce waste going to landfill. The aim of the tour was to track a waste product from cradle to grave/cradle and introduce solution providers that are doing their part to reduce waste going to landfill,” says Quinton Williams, committee member of the IWMSA’s WMRIG group.