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SECTION 3 NATURAL RESOURCES CAPITAL STOCK

3.5 Solid Waste
   
Pressures on Landfill and Other Facility Capacity

   
3.5.4.8

Current projections, based on current (1998) daily waste disposal amounts of 16,500 tonnes per day, indicate that existing landfills are expected to reach their capacity by 2015 (HKSARG 1998). The lifespan of existing landfills (ie existing capital stock) can be extended through implementation of the Waste Reduction Framework Plan which includes waste reduction practices (eg increased reuse and recycling) and bulk waste reduction options (eg incineration). A further option lies in examining the feasibility of expanding the void capacity of the three existing strategic landfills in the territory.

   
3.5.4.9 The landfill capacity projection above is premised on identifying adequate outlets for C&D materials, which otherwise would be disposed in landfills (see Paragraph 3.5.3.5). A recent study on public fill capacity (Mouchel 1998) estimated that 80% of all C&D material generated from 1998 onward would be placed in public fill areas rather than landfills. However, this will depend on the timeframe and volume of C&D arisings and the timeframe and volume of public fill requirements, both of which are difficult to predict with certainty. The study recommends a hierarchical strategy for public fill consisting of avoidance/reduction of arisings, reuse in end-user defined projects, recycling for production of aggregate, and as a contingency option, disposal in end-user undefined projects.
   
3.5.4.10 Despite these measures, it is acknowledged that there will always be a need for disposal of some waste to landfill. Since the decomposition rate of wastes buried in landfills is very slow, the key constraint on landfill capacity is in effect the availability of suitable land. In addition to topographical and geological requirements, the potential for additional landfill sites in Hong Kong is severely limited by competing land uses for suitable development locations and existing zoning and protection ordinances (see full discussion in Paragraphs 3.2.2.1 - 3.2.2.7). Given the amount of land required for landfills (the three strategic landfills occupy a total area of 270 hectares for example), limited land resources in Hong Kong mean that not only are new sites for landfills difficult to find, but they will also be very expensive to procure.
   
3.5.4.11 Although there may be impacts to soils and groundwater associated with landfill disposal, these impacts will be relatively localised and controlled in comparison to current illegal storage/dumping practices which are responsible for unknown, but likely substantial, levels of land contamination. Hong Kong's modern strategic landfills have been designed to collect, treat and dispose of contaminating by-products in an environmentally responsible manner. Other waste treatment options, such as incineration, may have less impact on groundwater and soils than landfills, but relatively greater impact on the assimilative capacity of local airsheds (see Paragraph 5.4.1.17).

 

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Last Revision Date : 26 March 2002