Current:Home > ScamsMangrove forest thrives around what was once Latin America’s largest landfill -Wealth Legacy Solutions
Mangrove forest thrives around what was once Latin America’s largest landfill
Fastexy Exchange View
Date:2025-03-11 01:26:18
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — It was once Latin America’s largest landfill. Now, a decade after Rio de Janeiro shut it down and redoubled efforts to recover the surrounding expanse of highly polluted swamp, crabs, snails, fish and birds are once again populating the mangrove forest.
“If we didn’t say this used to be a landfill, people would think it’s a farm. The only thing missing is cattle,” jokes Elias Gouveia, an engineer with Comlurb, the city’s garbage collection agency that is shepherding the plantation project. “This is an environmental lesson that we must learn from: nature is remarkable. If we don’t pollute nature, it heals itself”.
Gouveia, who has worked with Comlurb for 38 years, witnessed the Gramacho landfill recovery project’s timid first steps in the late 1990s.
The former landfill is located right by the 148 square miles (383 square kilometers) Guanabara Bay. Between the landfill’s inauguration in 1968 and 1996, some 80 million tons of garbage were dumped in the area, polluting the bay and surrounding rivers with trash and runoff.
In 1996, the city began implementing measures to limit the levels of pollution in the landfill, starting with treating some of the leachate, the toxic byproduct of mountains of rotting trash. But garbage continued to pile up until 2012, when the city finally shut it down.
“When I got there, the mangrove was almost completely devastated, due to the leachate, which had been released for a long time, and the garbage that arrived from Guanabara Bay,” recalled Mario Moscatelli, a biologist hired by the city in 1997 to assist officials in the ambitious undertaking.
The bay was once home to a thriving artisanal fishing industry and popular palm-lined beaches. But it has since become a dump for waste from shipyards and two commercial ports. At low tide, household trash, including old washing machines and soggy couches, float atop vast islands of accumulated sewage and sediment.
The vast landfill, where mountains of trash once attracted hundreds of pickers, was gradually covered with clay. Comlurb employees started removing garbage, building a rainwater drainage system, and replanting mangroves, an ecosystem that has proven particularly resilient — and successful — in similar environmental recovery projects.
Mangroves are of particular interest for environmental restoration for their capacity to capture and store large amounts of carbon, Gouveia explained.
To help preserve the rejuvenated mangrove from the trash coming from nearby communities, where residents sometimes throw garbage into the rivers, the city used clay from the swamp to build a network of fences. To this day, Comlurb employees continue to maintain and strengthen the fences, which are regularly damaged by trespassers looking for crabs.
Leachate still leaks from the now-covered landfill, which Comlurb is collecting and treating in one of its wastewater stations.
Comlurb and its private partner, Statled Brasil, have successfully recovered some 60 hectares, an area six times bigger than what they started with in the late 1990s.
“We have turned things around,” Gouveia said. “Before, (the landfill) was polluting the bay and the rivers. Now, it is the bay and the rivers that are polluting us.”
veryGood! (675)
Related
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- She writes for a hit Ethiopian soap opera. This year, the plot turns on child marriage
- Scientists zap sleeping humans' brains with electricity to improve their memory
- Dwindling Arctic Sea Ice May Affect Tropical Weather Patterns
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Indiana reprimands doctor who spoke publicly about providing 10-year-old's abortion
- National Eating Disorders Association phases out human helpline, pivots to chatbot
- The Limit Does Not Exist On How Grool Pregnant Lindsay Lohan's Beach Getaway Is
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Two and a Half Men's Angus T. Jones Is Unrecognizable in Rare Public Sighting
Ranking
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Some Utilities Want a Surcharge to Let the Sunshine In
- As Covid-19 Surges, California Farmworkers Are Paying a High Price
- Hip-hop turns 50: Here's a part of its history that doesn't always make headlines
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Climate Science Discoveries of the Decade: New Risks Scientists Warned About in the 2010s
- A Climate Activist Turns His Digital Prowess to Organizing the Youth Vote in November
- Could the Flight Shaming Movement Take Off in the U.S.? JetBlue Thinks So.
Recommendation
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
Offshore Drilling Plan Under Fire: Zinke May Have Violated Law, Senator Says
Sagebrush Rebel Picked for Public Lands Post Sparks Controversy in Mountain West Elections
As Covid-19 Surges, California Farmworkers Are Paying a High Price
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
Vanderpump Rules Unseen Clip Exposes When Tom Sandoval Really Pursued Raquel Leviss
Hundreds of sea lions and dolphins are turning up dead on the Southern California coast. Experts have identified a likely culprit.
Supreme Court rules against Navajo Nation in legal fight over water rights