Landfill Fire In Suburban Chicago Rages On

Stephen Ursery, Editor, Waste Age Magazine

November 11, 2004

1 Min Read
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Naperville, Ill. — An underground fire at a former landfill in suburban Chicago’s Greene Valley Forest Preserve continues to smolder while investigators have yet to discover the location of an oxygen leak that’s fueling the blaze, according to a report in the Daily Herald newspaper. "The blaze is a result of spontaneous combustion that likely occurred when oxygen reached decomposing garbage and heated up, officials believe," the paper says. "A grass fire erupted on the surface Aug. 7 and was extinguished, but the underground fire is surviving because of that oxygen leak." The fire presents no risk to the public, local officials told the paper.

Per a contract with the Forest Preserve District of DuPage County, Ill., Houston-based Waste Management Inc. extracts landfill gas from the site to be converted into electricity, the paper says. "Landfill gas production has been halted in a section of the landfill where the fire is burning," the Daily Herald says.

About the Author

Stephen Ursery

Editor, Waste Age Magazine, Waste360

Stephen Ursery is the editor of Waste Age magazine. During his time as editor, Waste Age has won more than 20 national and regional awards. He has worked for Penton Media since August 1999. Before joining Waste Age as the magazine's managing editor, he was an associate editor for American City & County and for National Real Estate Investor.

Prior to joining Penton, Stephen worked as a reporter for The Marietta Daily Journal and The Fulton County Daily Report, both of which are located in metro Atlanta.

Stephen earned a BA in History from Rhodes College in Memphis, Tenn.

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