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When You’ve Conquered Leachate, Everything Else Is Easy

Simon Osuji by Simon Osuji
July 30, 2025
in Infrastructure
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When You’ve Conquered Leachate, Everything Else Is Easy
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Kirsten Kelly speaks to Dr. Nthabiseng Motsoane, EnviroServ’s national technical manager, to discuss the challenges of leachate treatment and methods used to manage it effectively.

Dr Nthabiseng Motsoane, EnviroServs national technical manager

Dr. Nthabiseng Motsoane, EnviroServ’s national technical manager.

Leachate is a contaminated liquid formed when rainwater or moisture percolates through waste, absorbing various pollutants. Its complex and variable nature makes treatment difficult.
Leachate management often begins before the leachate is even produced.
“In our landfill cells, we have a network of collection pipes, sumps, geomembranes and grid-net detection systems that are designed to protect the environment from leachate. Furthermore, we often pre-treat any liquid waste before it is disposed of at our landfills. For example, oils are stabilised with natural additives to form a solid mixture,” says Dr. Nthabiseng Motsoane, EnviroServ’s national technical manager.
EnviroServ has also adopted progressive capping of its landfills. This is the covering of a landfill area with a barrier layer during its operational life. The progressive capping minimises the area of waste exposed to water and so reduces precipitation ingress as well as emissions from a landfill area. Any rainwater on top of the barrier layer is then collected through a stormwater drain as it is not contaminated by waste. This significantly reduces the volume of leachate that EnviroServ landfills generate.

The variable nature of leachate

Motsoane explains that each landfill or in EnviroServ’s case, integrated waste management facility, produces a unique type of leachate, which requires a tailored treatment approach.

“The chemical composition of leachate differs from site to site depending on the waste streams accepted. Leachate at our Holfontein waste management facility differs to that at our Chloorkop waste management facility.”

An added complexity is the changing chemical composition of leachate over time, with chemical oxygen demand (COD) and biological oxygen demand (BOD) levels diminishing as the leachate ages. Increased levels of salts, heavy metals, ammonia, and nitrogen may be observed during the later stages of leachate development.
Each landfill must be assessed on a case-by-case basis, considering its operational history and the nature of the waste it has received—whether organic, inorganic, or a combination of both. The chemical composition of the resulting leachate should be thoroughly analysed for each site before deciding on a treatment option – keeping in mind that the end product after treatment must legally comply with discharge standards. These discharge standards often differ from province to province.

Treatment options

Leachate treatment plant in Africa
Motsoane strongly recommends the pretreatment of leachate before using reverse osmosis. “Typically, a biological treatment would be applied to leachate before using membranes where one would use micro filtration, followed by ultra-filtration, nano filtration and lastly reverse osmosis (RO). RO membranes are semi permeable, extremely sensitive and can easily foul. While RO membranes extract most salts, they cannot completely remove ammonia. Therefore, biological treatment should be used at the beginning to break down the nitrogen.”


A biological treatment method used by EnviroServ at one of their sites is an anaerobic sequencing batch reactor (SBR). This is well suited to leachate that is high is ammonia. The ultra-filtration membranes remove the suspended solids, and total dissolved solids (TDS).

“Other pre-treatment options (before RO) include chemical or physical precipitation. In Uganda we receive both water-based and synthetic-based slops from a client that we must treat before sending it to a landfill. We coagulate the water-based slops using a polymer and chemical, where the solids sink to the bottom and the water rises to the top and is then extracted. Synthetic-based slops that contain oil has a lighter density than water, so the water has to be extracted from the middle,” adds Motsoane.
EnviroServ uses a leachate evaporation system as well as membrane technology at their sites.
As a SUEZ company, EnviroServ has gained even more intellectual property, skills and knowledge into leachate management, with global references and broader expertise. “We engage with international technical experts on almost a daily basis,” says Motsoane.

Leachate treatment plant in Uganda

EnviroServ recently commissioned a leachate treatment plant in Uganda in order to ensure high-quality water recovery while adhering to stringent National Environment Management Authority (NEMA) regulations. The facility utilises advanced two-stage RO technology, designed to process up to 450 m³ of wastewater per day. The recovered water is used for dust suppression and flushing toilets, providing significant value given the landfill’s remote location and limited water access. Some of the treated water is even sold to nearby businesses.
“Although the water quality after the first RO treatment is already high and meets or exceeds discharge standards, we installed a second RO system to provide an additional level of assurance,” states Motsoane.
This commitment to quality is matched by an equally strong focus on safety.

Safety first

Leachate treatment plant in Uganda
EnviroServ has an excellent health and safety record and is aligned with best-practice global standards.

“If untreated, leachate can be hazardous substance, and anyone handling it is trained accordingly and always wears the appropriate personal protective equipment. I am very focused on keeping all treatment plants clean, with everything clearly labelled. Safety incidents are usually caused by the simplest of errors, and a clean site is a safe site,” emphasises Motsoane.



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