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SPILL-SORB
TYPICAL CASE HISTORIES


 

SPILL-SORB  Case History 1
Construction Surprise at the Southern Sun Hotel, Cape Town

In January of 1996, routine construction of the new Southern Sun Hotel in Cape Town, South Africa unexpectedly became a proving ground of the effectiveness of Spill-Sorb. While drilling for 30 metre deep concrete piles, a major pocket of Bunker Oil was struck, flooding the area. The site had previously been a tank farm, and the oil likely came from a long-forgotten pipeline fracture.
As the tide rose, the mixture had to be pumped out to enable concrete production to continue. Spill-Sorb was used as the filtration media; only clean water. as shown on the next page, reached the harbour.

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The photograph on the left shows one of the 1 x 30 metre deep piles that were sunk as foundations for the new hotel.  Notice the thick, black floating oil.
2-2.jpg (16636 bytes) To clean the mixture of Bunker Oil and sea water, three tanks were coupled together with a manifold. A six inch pump moved the polluted water to the manifold. When the Spill-Sorb in a tank became saturated, the flow was diverted to the next tank. The spent Spill-Sorb was then removed for disposal as fresh Spill-Sorb was added, thus allowing continuous cleanup operations.

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SPILL-SORB  Case History 1 continued
Only Clean Water Now Spills into the Cape Town Foreshore

absorbent for industrial applications.JPG (13949 bytes) Spill-Sorb completely removed all the Bunker Oil from the sea water and oil mix encountered during the construction of the Southern Sun Hotel. Here water, cleaned by being filtered and the hydrocarbons being totally encapsulated by the Spill-Sorb, runs over the harbour wall in Cape Town. The 4000 mm Spill-Sorb filled boom around the filters, as seen in the photograph, acts as a barrier in the event that any oil escaped while a tank was being recharged with Spill-Sorb.

The Result: For a nominal cost, the contracting engineers managed to clean the oil waste "on site" using Spill-Sorb as the encapsulating medium. An outstanding saving was being able to allow the now cleaned sea water to run back into the ocean. The oil-filled Spill-Sorb was economically removed to a land fill near by, with no threat of it ever leaching the encapsulated Bunker Oil.

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SPILL-SORB Case History 2
Spill-Sorb Cleans Mess at Power Station

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Photo 1.
The back site at a Southern Africa power station. It is 
mid-summer, hot, humid and the air is filled with the rank odour 
of evaporating hydrocarbon fumes.


Photo 2.
What a mess! Discarded barrels with residues of diesel, 
hydraulic, lubricating and engine oils, paraffin and other hydrocarbons litter the back lot. A horrid oil and wax scum is on the water which has collected in this depression. The regional Spill-Sorb distributor is 
called in
to solve the problem.  First, the leaking barrels are removed.

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Photo 3.
Then Spill-Sorb is scattered loosely over the entire oil, solvent and water mix. Spill-Sorb immediately starts encapsulating the hydrocarbons. 

Photo 4.
shows that within 30 seconds there is a visibly noticeable difference compared to photo 3.

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SPILL-SORB  Case History 2 continued

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The area is now totally covered with Spill-Sorb.
Photo 5.

Skimmers are then used to insure our product comes into contact 
with all the spilled materials in the pond. In Photo 6 , the cleanup 
crew then skims the encapsulated mixture, ready for collection.
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Once skimmed and collected, only clean water remains. Photos 7&8. This is then pumped out of the holding 
pond.
Spill-Sorb is then tilled into the earth, ensuring encapsulation of all the hydrocarbons that remain buried in the soil.

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