This 24-page issue of EBJ provides an overview to the $4 billion air pollution control equipment market. EBJ projects slight growth over the next three years.
In this issue:
Air Pollution Control Overview: The $4 billion air pollution control equipment market projects slight growth over the next three years. (Pages 1-4)
Features: Invalidation of EPA’s Clean Air Mercury Rule brings uncertainty to air pollution control market; CO2 capture market dominated by select few companies; lack of clarity on New Source Review; indoor air quality market evolving. (Pages 4-13)
Profiles: Black & Veatch posts 40% annual sales growth thanks to FGD and SCR installations; Fuel Tech enjoys record-breaking year; Peerless Mfg. sees solid growth; Burns & McDonnell stays busy with pollution-control retrofits; CECO enjoys “best year” ever, starts 2008 with entry into China; Barr Engineering finds consistent growth. (Pages 14-17, 19-22)
Executive Q&As:Trinity Consultants Inc. founder Richard Schulze reflects on company buyout, air-quality consulting business; Anguil Environmental looks abroad as uncertainties trouble U.S. economy. (Pages 18-19, 22-23)
When it comes to the $4 billion air pollution control equipment market, for the past several years, the bull’s-eye has been drawn on the electric utility industry and its fleet of fossil fuel-fired power plants, with a special emphasis on the coal-fired facilities. Regulatory initiatives aimed at reducing emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOX), sulfur dioxide (SO2), fine particulate matter (PM 2.5), and mercury have applied to multiple sources of these pollutants across several industry sectors, but electric utilities have been identified as leading sources and have been the first targets for control, at the state and federal levels.
That’s not likely to change any time soon. Relatively new regulations like the federal Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR) affect electric power plants directly and significantly, and provide a series of compliance deadlines going out to 2015. Meanwhile, the legal troubles afflicting regulations like the federal Clean Air Mercury Rule (CAMR)— vacated by a federal court in February 2008— simply delay the day of reckoning. As they so often do, many states have stepped into the mercury control arena, establishing emissions standards that are more stringent than those in CAMR, and perhaps more stringent than any standards that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will ever promulgate (although who knows what a new administration in the White House will do).
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Table of Contents:
Air Pollution Control Overview: The $4 billion air pollution control equipment market projects slight growth over the next three years. (Pages 1-4)
Features: Invalidation of EPA’s Clean Air Mercury Rule brings uncertainty to air pollution control market; CO2 capture market dominated by select few companies; lack of clarity on New Source Review; indoor air quality market evolving. (Pages 4-13)
Profiles: Black & Veatch posts 40% annual sales growth thanks to FGD and SCR installations; Fuel Tech enjoys record-breaking year; Peerless Mfg. sees solid growth; Burns & McDonnell stays busy with pollution-control retrofits; CECO enjoys “best year” ever, starts 2008 with entry into China; Barr Engineering finds consistent growth. (Pages 14-17, 19-22)
Executive Q&As:Trinity Consultants Inc. founder Richard Schulze reflects on company buyout, air-quality consulting business; Anguil Environmental looks abroad as uncertainties trouble U.S. economy. (Pages 18-19, 22-23)
Exhibits Found in this Issue:
Total US Stationary Source APC Market by Customer in 2007 ($4 billion total)
Total US Stationary Source APC Market by Equipment Type 1989-2007 ($mil)
Companies Featured in this Issue:
ADA-ES, Inc. AECOM Air Quality Sciences, Inc. Alstom American Electric Power Babcock & Wilcox Barr Engineering BASF BCC Research Black & Veatch Burns & McDonnell Engineering Calgon Carbon Dow Chemical Co. E.ON Electric Power Research Institute ENSR Environmental Service Professionals, Inc. (ESP) ERM Fluor Corp. Fuel Tech, Inc. Institute of Clean Air Companies, Inc. Integrated Fixation Systems Co. (IFS) Kaeding and Associates Kerr-McGee Linde Group McIlvaine Co. MHI Mitsubishi Heavy Industries NORIT Peerless Mfg. Co. Powerspan Corp. RMT, Inc. RWE Siemens Environmental Systems Solucorp Industries, Ltd. TestAmerica, Inc. The Chelsea Group TransAlta Corp. Trinity Consultants Inc. We Energies
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