I didn’t realise you were a fan of landfill liners, me too. Happy to discuss them all day long. My favourite landfill liners are the clay lining system at Brogborough Landfill phase IV, the ex-London Brick clay quarry ran by Shanks and McEwan in Bedfordshire in the UK and the new Tellus Holdings facility at Sandy Ridge WA which utilises Kaolin Clay as the barrier liner. Both are engineered clay with a tested permeability of 1 x 10 (-9) The problem with composite liners like the Gingin one is that they leak eventually into the ground water, you will recall the NRC report into landfill leakage from composite liners being approx 500 litres per hectare per day.
I would always choose a engineered clay liner as its withstands compression, geological distortion and resistance to leachate. Now, leachate isn’t sour, its normally quite acidic hence its effect on composite liners. Now back to ultimately what this site is about, good market analysis. My advice is still the same, wait until the share price goes up after the licence is issued and then sell the lot as the company will never make a profit with the current management team.
I didn’t realise you were a fan of landfill liners, me too....
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