Your search for 'clean fill' returned 1769 results.

Pollution responses

The Council responds 24/7 to environmental incidents to investigate, and clean up pollution and take enforcement action if necessary. To report a pollution incident, call the Council's environmental hotline, 0800 736 222 - switchboard is open 24/7. Environmental incidents include spills, accidents and situations where an industry or resource consent holder does not meet consent conditions or regional plan rules. More than half of the incidents that the Council investigates are reported by the

5AEE AppendixC

pad(s) on which compost and its raw products are placed, is collected and channelled to the leachate collection system. The Site Manager will: > Ensure that materials that can be covered with compost covers are in place daily16 > Check the perimeter drains weekly and arrange cleaning if required. Priority will be given based on current weather conditions and risk of contamination i. e. pending rain. > Ensure pond levels are maintained at a low level to allow the capture of the first flush

Annual report 2013-2014

landfill located on Colson Road at New Plymouth, in the Waiwhakaiho catchment. The landfill is currently filling stage three of the site which has a design capacity of approximately 800,000 cubic metres. Stages one and two have been closed and are fully reinstated. This report, for the period July 2013 to June 2014, describes the monitoring programme implemented by the Taranaki Regional Council to assess the consent holder’s environmental performance during the period under review, and the

Report 2011-2014

section of the well is drilled, a steel casing is installed. Cement is then pumped down the well to fill the annulus (the space between the steel casing and the surrounding country rock). This process is repeated until the target depth is reached, with each section of steel casing interlocked with the next. Production tubing is then fitted within the steel casing to the target depth. A packer is fitted between the production tubing and casing to stop oil/gas/produced water from entering the

Route 98 - Inglewood (new service)

Card(external link) Bee Card FAQs Bee Card terms and conditions(external link) BEHAVIOUR ON THE BUS All students and other passengers must understand and comply with this code of conduct. All passengers have the right to: Fair treatment and respect. A friendly and efficient service. A safe, comfortable and clean environment when waiting or travelling. You are responsible for: Your belongings and personal effects. Your own behaviour. Paying the correct fare when boarding (cash or Smart Card). Showing the

NPDC Closed and Contingency Landfills (Inglewood, Okato and Marfell Park) Annual Report 2021-2022

of a gully in the Awai Stream catchment. As the gully was filled with refuse, cover material was progressively excavated from the side walls ahead of the fill. The underlying soil, cover and capping material at the site is clay (Taranaki Ash). Solid waste from the Inglewood kerbside collection was disposed of at Colson Road from 1999 and the Inglewood landfill was closed to general waste acceptance on 1 September 2006. During the period January 2005 to March 2006 solid waste from the

Report 2013-2014

from TAG Oil (NZ) Limited. On 26 March 2014 approximately 1,000 litres of hydraulic oil spilled at the Southern Cross wellsite as a result of a hydraulic pump failure. The clean up operation was supervised by Spill Control New Zealand. The area was quickly and page effectively bunded with a small sump dug to collect the oil, which was then pumped into drums for removal from the site. An on-site crane was used to remove the container which housed the hydraulic pump system

Good farming practice

soil erosion, as identified in the Deer Farmers Landcare Manual. Maintain pasture length in winter or wet periods, to prevent soil being washed off in heavy rain. In particularly vulnerable areas retain tussock cover or native vegetation to regulate water runoff and to reduce risk of soil loss particularly in gullies or along riparian margins. If fence-pacing is bad, fill in area and re-sow or plant with trees and if damage is extreme, re-fence to remove the problem area. If fence-pacing continues,

Southern Quarries Biennial Report 2020-2022

or trade premises onto land under any circumstances, unless the activity is expressly allowed for by a resource consent, a rule in a regional plan, or by national regulations. The Council permits as of right, some discharges to land (for example clean sand or soil or concrete to land, as occurs during re-instatement). Most other discharges require a resource consent. At the end of the monitoring period seven quarries in Taranaki held cleanfill discharge consents. 1.2.4 Summary of