A landfill is a specially designed site where waste is buried in a controlled and environmentally safe way. While many people imagine it as just a dumping ground for trash, a landfill is a complex system built to protect public health, manage waste, and reduce environmental harm.
Modern landfills are constructed with thick protective liners and drainage systems that prevent harmful liquids (called leachate) from contaminating soil or water sources. They also include gas collection systems to manage methane, a gas produced as waste decomposes.
The primary purpose of a landfill is to safely store waste that cannot be reused, recycled, or composted. These include items like non-recyclable plastics, some packaging materials, broken household items, contaminated food waste, and more. In a well-run landfill, waste is carefully layered and compacted to take up less space, then covered regularly with soil or synthetic materials to minimize odor and keep pests away.
While landfills are a critical part of Uganda’s waste management infrastructure, they are not meant to be the first solution. They are the last stop, meant only for what can’t be diverted elsewhere.
Understanding what a landfill is helps us better appreciate why reducing, reusing, and recycling are not just environmental slogans, they are steps we all need to take to ensure landfills work effectively and serve our communities safely.