https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/environment-agency-conditional-licence/environment-agency-conditional-licencehttps://www.gov.uk/government/publications/environment-agency-conditional-licence/environment-agency-conditional-licence
This dataset is currently updated every 6 months. Data on landfill sites that are surrendered or revoked will move from the Authorised Landfill Layer but may not be updated into this dataset on the same frequency.
This data is a national historic landfill dataset that defines the location of and provides specific attributes for known historic landfill sites. An historic landfill is a site where there is no environmental permit in force. The Environment Agency is not the regulator for historic landfills. The dataset includes sites that existed before landfills were regulated. Much of this pre-licensing data was derived from a national survey in the early 1990s so it may be incomplete. It also includes sites that were licensed (permitted) where that licence is no longer in force, in accordance with the legislation at the time. The Historic Landfill dataset includes information that is held by either the local authority or the Environment Agency. The data is available in ESRI shape file format, with the boundaries digitised from a base scale of 1:10,000 and an associated attribute table comprising 34 fields. Where information is available, the polygons and attributes describe where the sites were located, when they were used, who used them and what was deposited. Where sites were licensed, there are name and address fields, licensee and operator information, licence issue and surrender dates, first and last input dates and waste types, together with some historical comments. Where an attribute is incomplete, that detail is not available.
According to the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission's Municipal Solid Waste regulations (30 TAC § 330.951), the definition of a closed municipal solid waste landfill is as follows:A discrete area of land or an excavation that has received only municipal solid waste or municipal solid waste combined with other solid wastes, including but not limited to construction/demolition waste, commercial solid waste, nonhazardous sludge, conditionally exempt small-quantity generator hazardous waste, and industrial solid waste, and that is not a land application unit, surface impoundment, injection well, or waste pit as those terms are now defined by 40 CFR § 257.2 (EPA Regulations).Under § 363.064 (a)(10) of the Texas Health and Safety Code, as amended by Senate Bill 1447, 76th Texas Legislature, all Councils of Governments are required to compile an inventory of closed municipal solid waste landfill units. Per the statutory provisions, the inventory is to include:a. Landfill units no longer in operationb. The exact boundaries of each former landfill unit or, if the exact boundaries are not known, the best approximation of each unit's boundariesc. A map showing the approximate boundaries of each former landfill unit, if the exact boundaries are not knownd. The current owners of the land on which the former landfill units were locatede. The current use of the landThe data collection was conducted by ATCOG staff. Based of this data a map depicting each landfill unit and its boundaries was produced. The site history, ownership information, current land use, and a narrative description of the location of each landfill are also included in the inventory. The minimum required components of the inventory, as required by the TNRCC, are listed below.An appendix is included in the Closed Landfill Inventory containing changes to the TNRCC database.All maps and supporting information are derived from the best available public records and many times they are only estimations. No claims are made as to the positional accuracy or completeness of the data or its suitability for a particular purpose.Once the compilation of the Inventory was complete public meetings were held on November 13, 2001, in Paris, November 19, 2001, in Texarkana, November 28, 2001 in Linden, and November 29, 2001 in Mt. Pleasant. No public comments were received at any meeting. The Solid Waste Advisory Committee met on January 17, 2002 and approved the Inventory and formally adopted the document as an amendment to the Regional Solid Waste Plan. The Executive Committee of ATCOG officially accepted this approval on January 31, 2002.For more information, visit https://atcog.org/Open Data Portal Homepage: https://open-data-portal-atcog.hub.arcgis.com/
This is a point coverage of landfills shown in the 1986 National Water Summary Report (U.S. Geological Survey, 1987). Keywords landfill
The Pre-Regulatory Landfill (PRLF) program was established in 2007 to address pre-1983 non-industrial landfills and dumps. A pre-regulatory landfill is defined as any land area, whether publicly or privately owner, on which municipal solid waste disposal occurred prior to January 1, 1983, but not thereafter and does not include any landfill used primarily for industrial solid waste. The PRLF program conducts the assessment and remediation of these sites directly. Local governments may conduct the assessment work and seek reimbursement of expenses if the work was pre-approved by the Program.To learn more about the PRLF program, visit their website HERE
This data set defines both current and historic landfills/waste disposal storage sites for the State of Vermont. Historic landfills were identified with the publication of the Vermont Ground Water Pollution Source Inventory by the Agency of Environmental Conservation, Department of Water Resources and Environmental Engineering Water Quality Division, December 1980. Current landfill locations supplied by the Solid Waste Division of the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources, Department of Environmental Conservation.This dataset includes: active landfills - currently accepting waste, geo-located; closed landfills- ceased accepting waste and completed closure under solid waste regulations (post-1988), geo-located; historic landfills - ceased accepting waste prior to solid waste regulation implementation (pre-1988), locations obtained from a 1990 Vermont Groundwater Pollution Source Inventory completed by the Department of Waster Resources and Environmental Engineering Groundwater Management Section. The listing of historic landfills is likely incomplete.
The MassDEP Solid Waste Disposal Datalayers were compiled by the MA Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) to track the locations of land disposal and combustion of solid waste.This statewide service contains all ACTIVE combustion and land disposal facilities currently regulated under MassDEP's solid waste regulations (310 CMR 16.000 and 19.000). Active combustion facilities are represented as points. Active landfill footprints are represented as polygons; point symbology provides waste type information and facility name labels. This statewide service does not include unregulated dumping grounds, inactive or closed landfills or incinerators/combustion facilities.See full metadata.Map service also available.
Under the Town and Country Planning (General Development Procedure) Order 1995 Local Planning Authorities have to consult with the Environment Agency about all applications they receive to develop land within 250 metres of landfill sites (including any land that has been used as a landfill site within the past 30 years or is likely to be used as one in the near future). The Historic Landfill dataset was created to help fulfil our statutory responsibility to Local Planning Authorities by supplying information on the risks posed by landfill sites for development within 250m. The data is the most comprehensive and consistent national historic landfill dataset and defines the location of, and provides specific attributes for, known historic (closed) landfill sites, i.e. sites where there is no PPC permit or waste management licence currently in force. This includes sites that existed before the waste licensing regime and sites that have been licensed in the past but where this licence has been revoked, ceased to exist or surrendered and a certificate of completion has been issued. Historic Landfill includes all relevant historic information for the sites that both local authorities and the Environment Agency have collected over the yearsAdditional Links:DEFRA Data Services Platform - containing download linksHistoric Landfill WMSHistoric Landfill WFS
Web map published by the U.S. EPA Landfill Methane Outreach Program (LMOP) that shows currently operational landfill gas energy projects and landfills listed in the LMOP Database having latitude and longitude coordinates. Data for operational projects are provided in 4 layers by Project Type Category (electricity, direct use, RNG pipeline injection, and RNG local use). Data from the LMOP Database are available at https://www.epa.gov/lmop/lmop-landfill-and-project-database.
This data layer identifies all inactive landfills in New York State with known locations.Service is updated as needed and was last updated on 1/34/2023For more information see https://www.dec.ny.gov/chemical/8495.html
https://data.linz.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/https://data.linz.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/
A portion of land on which refuse, solid or semi-solid waste, is dumped and then covered with earth.
Data Dictionary for landfill_poly: https://docs.topo.linz.govt.nz/data-dictionary/tdd-class-landfill_poly.html
This layer is a component of the Topo50 map series. The Topo50 map series provides topographic mapping for New Zealand and it's offshore dependancies, at 1:50,000. For some small islands the printed map scale is 1:25,000. Although presented at 1:25,000 this layer, for all intents and purposes, forms part of the Topo50 map series.
Further information on Topo50: http://www.linz.govt.nz/topography/topo-maps/topo50
During an Emergency Event, especially during the recovery phase of operations, significant amounts of debris must be removed from the impact zone in order to facilitate access to the impact area, begin restoration of basic services, and reconstruction of damaged and destroyed facilities in the impact zone. This data set is an attempt to locate Solid Waste facilities that debris can be directed to during recovery. This layer was initiated by extracting (based upon NAICS and SIC codes) Landfills from the EPA Facility Registry System (FRS) contained in HSIP Gold 2012. This collection is being supplemented, edited, and amended by source data maintained by individual States. This collection effort is limited to facilities that accept Municipal Solid Waste and/or Construction and Demolition Debris; AND that are considered ACTIVE based upon State permit at the time of release.Geographic locations of each entity were placed on visible vehicle scales associated with each facility, or the logical entrance to the facility if no vehicle scales we visible on imagery.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/environment-agency-conditional-licence/environment-agency-conditional-licencehttps://www.gov.uk/government/publications/environment-agency-conditional-licence/environment-agency-conditional-licence
This data is a national historic landfill dataset that defines the location of and provides specific attributes for known historic landfill sites. An historic landfill is a site where there is no environmental permit in force. The Environment Agency is not the regulator for historic landfills. The dataset includes sites that existed before landfills were regulated. Much of this pre-licensing data was derived from a national survey in the early 1990s so it may be incomplete. It also includes sites that were licensed (permitted) where that licence is no longer in force, in accordance with the legislation at the time. The Historic Landfill dataset includes information that is held by either the local authority or the Environment Agency. Where sites were licensed, there are name and address fields, licensee and operator information, licence issue and surrender dates, first and last input dates and waste types, together with some historical comments. Where an attribute is incomplete, that detail is not available.
The quality and completeness of data is variable depending on how old a site is. This extract is updated twice yearly in Microsoft Excel format. Individual polygon shape files are also available in the Historic Landfill dataset.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
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Shows boundaries for open dump sites, approved landfills, and permitted landfills in Indiana. Provided by personnel of Indiana Department of Environmental Management, Office of Land Quality. The boundaries have been digitized, obtained via on-screen digitizing of historic air photos, lidar, or surveyed boundary maps. This data is current as of January 30, 2023.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The WMS Service (Web Map Service) called “Waste landfills” allows the visualisation and consultation of the data set that represent the cartography included in this service contains the location of existing waste landfills in Spain. A landfill is a waste disposal facility by means of its underground or surface storage, for periods of time longer than those considered for temporary storage. Royal Decree 1481/2001 of 27 December 2001 regulating the disposal of waste by landfilling classifies landfills into three categories according to the type of waste deposited: landfill for hazardous waste, landfill for non-hazardous waste and landfill for inert waste. These data have been obtained from three sources: 1.-Register of producers and waste managers (RPGR) based on the obligation of the Autonomous Communities to register these facilities, based on the provisions of Law 22/2011, on waste and contaminated soils. 2.- State Register of Emissions and Pollutant Sources (PRTR), linked to the Industrial Emissions Directive (IED) and which contains landfills of hazardous and non-hazardous waste with a capacity exceeding 10 tons/day or 25,000 tons. 3.-The data have also been collected directly from those responsible for the Autonomous Communities. The data collected are updated as of May 2018. The URL of the WMS Waste Dumps Service is: https://wms.mapama.gob.es/sig/EvaluacionAmbiental/Residuos/Vertederos/wms.aspx The reference systems offered by this service are: — For geographical coordinates: CRS: 84, EPSG:4230 (ED50), EPSG:4326 (WGS 84), EPSG:4258 (ETRS 89). — For U.T.M coordinates: EPSG:32628 (WGS 84/UTM zone 28N), EPSG:32629 (WGS 84/UTM zone 29N), EPSG:32630 (WGS 84/UTM zone 30N), EPSG:32631 (WGS 84/UTM zone 31N), EPSG:25828 (ETRS 89/UTM zone 28N), EPSG:25829 (ETRS 89/UTM zone 29N), EPSG:25830 (ETRS 89/UTM zone 30N), EPSG:25831 (ETRS 89/UTM zone 31N), EPSG:23028 (ED50/UTM zone 28N), EPSG:23029 (ED50/UTM zone 29N), EPSG:23030 (ED50/UTM zone 30N), EPSG:23031 (ED50/UTM zone 31N).
https://maps.grey.ca/pages/termshttps://maps.grey.ca/pages/terms
All operating (existing) municipal landfill sites and known abandoned landfill sites are identified in this layer. Abandoned landfill sites have been classified into three categories based on the Historic Landfill Site Review:Cleared SitesD-4 Recommended to Clear SitePreviously Evaluated Sites
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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This is a raster-based suitability map of landfill sites produced after the February 6, 2023, Türkiye earthquakes centred on Kahramanmaraş - Pazarcık and Kahramanmaraş - Elbistan. In this study, a site selection model was developed using open-source Geographic Information Systems (GIS) software and the Best-Worst Method (BWM), one of the Multi-Criteria Decision-Making Methods, to determine the most suitable landfill areas immediately after the earthquake.The suitability map of the landfill sites can be accessed through the Serverless Cloud-GIS based Disaster Management Portal at https://web.itu.edu.tr/metemu/nominal/deprem.htmlThe pairwise comparison matrix, weight calculation, and sensitivity analysis are also provided in the MS Excel file.
This map reflects all active and closed, but permitted Municipal Solid Waste (MSW), Construction and Demolition (CDLF), Land-Clearing and Inert Debris (LCID) and Demolition (DEMO) landfill facilities. For all other Solid Waste facilities, please see the "Other Permitted Solid Waste Faciltiies" layer. The purpose of this map is to provide the public and other government entities a visual overview of facilities that undergo inspections and groundwater monitoring as part of facility management. Updated on an as-needed basis. Attributes:Permit_ID: Facility identification number (Varies depending on facility type)Permit_Name: Facility nameAddressCityStateZipCountyPrimaryWaste_Type: Type of waste that makes up the bulk of material at the facilityPrimaryOperation_Type: All listed as "LF" for regulatory purposesPermitStatus: Active, InactiveClosed, or InactivePermitted Status: Open (if Active) or Closed (if InactiveClosed or InactivePermitted)Data Contact: Dylan Friedenberg - dylan.friedenberg@ncdenr.gov ; (919) 707-8248
The sites are primarily solid waste disposal sites, including municipal solid waste, industrial solid waste, residual solid waste, and construction and demolition debris. Some sites with hazardous waste are also included. The types of sites may include licensed landfills, landfills that existed prior to state regulatory programs, exempt waste sites, unauthorized dumps, open dumps, and disposal lagoons. Some sites in the database may have been partially or fully remediated and may no longer contain significant amounts of waste. The data are incomplete and are still in development. New locations will be added and existing locations may be corrected. This file does not include all sites regulated by Ohio EPA under other regulatory programs (e.g. there are many sites regulated under programs such as hazardous waste sites, surface water, "brownfields", etc. that are not included in this dataset). Data were developed from Ohio EPA archival files. The accuracy of the locations depends on the available information. Where possible, points were located on the actual waste unit, or within the tax parcel boundary where the waste was said to be located. Some points were located using coordinates or descriptive text in field notes, inspection reports, etc. In some cases, the best available information is the nearest intersection or an address. When possible the data were compared against local tax maps to improve the accuracy of the locations. Additional sources of information included but were not limited to newspaper archives, solid waste district plans, pollution inventories, historical societies, and local governments. The information used in this dataset come from files that date back to the late 1960s and may not represent the current site conditions. The data includes only that known to Ohio EPA's solid waste regulatory program and may not include sites that were under past authority of other regulatory agencies such as local health departments.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Data with the following information for small landfills: * open/closed status * site owner * site location * Certificate of Approval number This dataset was last updated in 2014 and contains out of date information. It has been replaced by the Ontario landfills dataset.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/environment-agency-conditional-licence/environment-agency-conditional-licencehttps://www.gov.uk/government/publications/environment-agency-conditional-licence/environment-agency-conditional-licence
This dataset is currently updated every 6 months. Data on landfill sites that are surrendered or revoked will move from the Authorised Landfill Layer but may not be updated into this dataset on the same frequency.
This data is a national historic landfill dataset that defines the location of and provides specific attributes for known historic landfill sites. An historic landfill is a site where there is no environmental permit in force. The Environment Agency is not the regulator for historic landfills. The dataset includes sites that existed before landfills were regulated. Much of this pre-licensing data was derived from a national survey in the early 1990s so it may be incomplete. It also includes sites that were licensed (permitted) where that licence is no longer in force, in accordance with the legislation at the time. The Historic Landfill dataset includes information that is held by either the local authority or the Environment Agency. The data is available in ESRI shape file format, with the boundaries digitised from a base scale of 1:10,000 and an associated attribute table comprising 34 fields. Where information is available, the polygons and attributes describe where the sites were located, when they were used, who used them and what was deposited. Where sites were licensed, there are name and address fields, licensee and operator information, licence issue and surrender dates, first and last input dates and waste types, together with some historical comments. Where an attribute is incomplete, that detail is not available.