Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Taking Out The Trash: A Massive Amount Of Garbage After Fort McMurray's Wildfire

The Canadian Press, 11 Jul, 2016 11:33 AM
    FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — Fred Thompson-Brown is man at the centre of a mind-bogglingly large and occasionally toxic clean-up. 
     
    As manager of Fort McMurray's landfill, he heads up a complex operation to contain all of the rubble left behind from the wildfire that destroyed parts of that northern Alberta city. Here are a few quick facts on Fort McMurray's massive cleanup:
     
    How big? Fort McMurray lost 2,400 homes and structures during a wildfire that swept through the oilsands city in May.
     
    How much waste? Previous urban wildfires in California and Slave Lake, Alta., suggest each home generates between 97 and 175 tonnes of ash, soil, concrete, metal and miscellaneous waste.
     
    How much landfill? Waste generated by the fire is expected to be at least equivalent to the landfill's entire 2015 intake of 250,000 tonnes. It could go as high as 440,000 tonnes.
     
     
    How many loads? Between 20,000 and 47,000 truckloads of waste are expected during the coming demolition phase. A truck will dump a load every 60 seconds.
     
    How dangerous? Equipment operators work in sealed cabs with air filters changed daily. Nobody gets on-site without a particulate filter mask.
     
    How smelly? A total of 11,437 fridges and freezers arrived in June, all of which had to be emptied of rotting food.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Grand Opening Celebration of the Kwantlen St. Farmer’s Market

    Grand Opening Celebration of the Kwantlen St. Farmer’s Market
    The celebration included a children’s ‘Eat the Rainbow’ Workshop, traditional Chinese dance performances, comments from KPU President Dr. Alan Davis, Director of the Institute for Sustainable Agriculture Dr. Kent Mullinix and KSA President Alex McGowan. 

    Grand Opening Celebration of the Kwantlen St. Farmer’s Market

    Sikh Man's Turban Helps Save Life Of Struggling Teenage Swimmer Near Kamloops, B.C.

    Sikh Man's Turban Helps Save Life Of Struggling Teenage Swimmer Near Kamloops, B.C.
    Avtar Hothi and his son Paul were working at their family farm in Heffley Creek, just north of Kamloops, on Saturday evening when they heard cries for help.

    Sikh Man's Turban Helps Save Life Of Struggling Teenage Swimmer Near Kamloops, B.C.

    Sikh Veteran Lt. Col. Pritam Jauhal, Who Fought Over Turban Rights, Dies At 95

    Sikh Veteran Lt. Col. Pritam Jauhal, Who Fought Over Turban Rights, Dies At 95
    Pritam Singh Jauhal, a Second World War veteran who later fought for the right of Sikh men to wear a turban in the Royal Canadian Legion’s halls, has died at 95 in Surrey, B.C.

    Sikh Veteran Lt. Col. Pritam Jauhal, Who Fought Over Turban Rights, Dies At 95

    Local Mounties Expand Outreach To Surrey’s Diverse Communities

    Local Mounties Expand Outreach To Surrey’s Diverse Communities
    As we all celebrate Canadian Multiculturalism Day today, the Surrey RCMP is working to connect with the many diverse communities it serves both today and throughout the year with its Diversity Unit.

    Local Mounties Expand Outreach To Surrey’s Diverse Communities

    Work Starts On Smoother Surfaces For Several Surrey Highways

    Work Starts On Smoother Surfaces For Several Surrey Highways
    Several stretches of highway in the Surrey area are about to get a new look as work begins on a $5.2 million highway rehabilitation project for highways 10, 15, 91 and 99.

    Work Starts On Smoother Surfaces For Several Surrey Highways

    Abbotsford Police Seize 1141 Plants From Grow Operation

    Abbotsford Police Seize 1141 Plants From Grow Operation
    A total of 1141 marihuana plants were found on site and seized.

    Abbotsford Police Seize 1141 Plants From Grow Operation