Source-based rewritten blue bolted steel tank for landfill leachate storage
Leachate storage tank selection should start with chemistry, chloride/ammonia risk, pH, odor control, coating QA, and containment planning.

Leachate Storage Tanks for Environmental Containment

Landfill leachate can be chemically aggressive and variable. A serious RFQ should describe pH, chlorides, ammonia, sulfides, COD, temperature, solids, cleaning chemicals, odor control, and whether the tank is part of a treatment plant or temporary storage system.

Epoxy coated bolted tanks, GFS tanks, stainless systems for selected duties, and covered tank systems may be reviewed. The right decision must be based on service data and corrosion protection, not a generic landfill keyword.

Leachate Tank Specification Inputs

Review ItemRecommended Buyer Input
Leachate datapH, temperature, chlorides, ammonia, sulfides, COD/BOD, suspended solids, oil/grease, and cleaning chemicals.
Storage roleLandfill leachate collection, treatment buffer, emergency storage, equalization, or temporary containment.
Tank systemCapacity, roof/open-top decision, venting, odor control, mixers, nozzles, drains, manways, and secondary containment expectations.
InspectionCoating thickness, holiday testing where specified, repair procedure, packing list, installation guide, and owner document package.

Why Leachate Needs a Separate Product Page

Leachate should not be hidden inside a generic wastewater page. Its chemistry and environmental risk make coating choice, access, venting, containment, and inspection records more important.

For broader process context, connect this page to landfill leachate storage and the RFQ data checklist.

Next RFQ Steps

Send leachate chemistry, storage role, capacity, roof and odor control needs, project country, coating expectations, inspection records, and installation schedule.