The Citizen (KZN)

Waste landslide threat

BLAME GAME: CONTAMINAT­ED SLUDGE BEARS DOWN ON DANISH VILLAGE

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➳ Engineerin­g service company estimates clean-up will cost R3.9bn.

Asmall hamlet in the west of Denmark is facing an unusual existentia­l threat: a landslide of contaminat­ed waste that is bearing down on the community and a nearby river.

“It’s three to six million cubic metres of soil, clay and polluted dirt coming down from that hill and it’s all placed there by the company that was there,” fumes Jan Kristian Jensen, a 47-year-old resident of Olst.

The woes began on 11 December for the village, a close-knit community of 45 tidy brick homes. That’s when Nordic Waste, which specialise­s in cleaning up contaminat­ed soil, said the land was sliding at its hillside facility near the Alling river.

The company blamed heavy rainfall after the wettest year on record in Denmark.

The site’s waste comes mainly from Denmark’s mink farms, which were ordered to shut down during the Covid pandemic, as well as some imported waste from Norway. The problems rapidly escalated.

With the soil initially advancing by nine to 10 metres a day, pressure from the moving ground caused a secondary road to give way. All of Nordic Waste’s buildings but one then collapsed, as the mud flowed freely.

A square-kilometre perimeter was erected around the site and the road was closed to traffic.

Eight days after its announceme­nt, Nordic Waste abandoned its efforts to contain the mess.

The nearby municipali­ty of Randers swiftly jumped in to take over. “We had to tell contractor­s to keep working with their big machines at the site to avoid everything being contaminat­ed,” the mayor of Randers, Torben Hansen, told AFP.

His top priorities were to protect the local river from being polluted and prevent Olst from being wiped off the map.

So far, he seems to have succeeded, with daily soil and water samples showing no signs of pollution.

But the area now resembles an enormous constructi­on site and several large basins have been created to collect rainwater.

The mayor is furious with Nordic Waste and the Randers municipali­ty does not want to finance the clean-up.

“In the first weeks, the municipali­ty spent 100 million kroner (about R178 million) and now we want the company to pay,” Hansen said.

The company, which was declared bankrupt on 22 January, is a subsidiary of the USTC holding company owned by billionair­e Torben Ostergaard-Nielsen, one of Denmark’s richest men.

An engineerin­g service consultanc­y, Cowi, has estimated the clean-up cost at 2.2 billion kroner, insisting on the importance of ongoing work to build dykes to protect the village from an “avalanche of mud”.

The Danish parliament has already allocated 205 million kroner.

“If nothing was done, within one to two years our whole city ... would be covered by five to 10 metres of dirt,” said Jensen, citing a Cowi report.

Neither Jensen nor his neighbours imagined they would ever be affected by such a catastroph­e.

According to geologist Kristian Svennevig of the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland, “this type of landslide is completely unique in Denmark” – and totally the result of human activities.

“In the public discourse the landslide was caused by this very wet 2023. But we can see that it started way back in 2021,” a “relatively dry” period, he said.

“It’s not caused by climatic factors. It is in fact caused by the landfill itself, that the soil is being put in this old clay pit,” he said.

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? SOMETHING STINKS. An aerial view taken on 25 January shows a contaminat­ed waste landslide owned by Nordic Waste. The company blames heavy rainfall for the land sliding at its hillside facility near the Alling river near the Danish town of Randers.
Picture: AFP SOMETHING STINKS. An aerial view taken on 25 January shows a contaminat­ed waste landslide owned by Nordic Waste. The company blames heavy rainfall for the land sliding at its hillside facility near the Alling river near the Danish town of Randers.

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