EBJ's Annual Review of the U.S. Remediation & Redeveloment Industry 2006 (Volume XIX, No. 3/4, 2006)
This 32-page issue of EBJ provides a snapshot of the $7-billion U.S. Site Remediation Industry with the latest market data on the remediation business by EBJ, survey results, forecasts and interviews with more than 25 remediation, development and environmental consulting & engineering executives and other sources. Profiles reveal that companies are taking a variety of paths—and making a variety of partnerships—to lead to success in brownfields and remediation.
In This Issue:
Remediation & Redevelopment Overview: The $7-billion U.S. remediation market continues to shift towards redevelopment; EBJ presents new data on market size and trends in technology, with survey results on win rates and contracts. (Page 1-4)
The Brownfields Market is robust, says publisher of Brownfields News, with many factors contributing to sustained growth and opportunity. (Page 5-6)
A brief history of Superfund; executives debate its relevance and future. (Page 6-9)
DOD’s BRAC V promises a new round of closures and cleanups: Includes list of bases set for closure and for realignment. (Page 10-15)
U.S. redevelopment movement slow to pick up on the ‘integrated restoration’ model that is being developed with notable success in Canada and Europe. (Page 15-17)
Detailed Company Profiles in remediation & redevelopment: Tetra Tech, O’Neill Properties, Terracon, PDG Environmental, Creamer Environmental, Atwell-Hicks, Brownfield Associates, Trihydro, Maser Consulting and Terrasure reveal a wide variety of companies and approaches to an evolving market. (Page 18-31)
This issue of EBJ explores the federal environmental market - with an emphasis on remediation - as a companion to the previous issue of EBJ (which focused on cleanup/redevelopment in the municipal and private sectors). Results of EBJ's 2004 survey of remediation consultants and contractors and the resulting market model are also presented. The issue also probes the activity in federal land-use management, which involves a number of other agencies beside DOD.
In This Issue:
Federal Remediation Overview: The $6.3-billion remediation market has seen an increasing share from federal markets. Accelerated cleanup programs and outsourcing initiatives have been good for contractors who are branching into environmental work for other agencies. (Page 1-5)
DOD and DOE get serious about small business contracting, work out kinks with ID/IQ contract vehicles. (Page 6-8)
Resource Management Plans and GSA contracts become the entry points for federal work for Bureau of Land Management and other agencies; Jones & Stokes, SWCA and ENSR all work the land-use market. (Page 9-12)
Company Profiles: SWCA Environmental Consultants fills a dominant role in western resource management plans; Shaw E&I maintains a load of federal work and chase Iraq opportunities; TolTest takes on a WERC contract; Sullivan Consulting Group rides federal work and an acquisition to phenomenal growth; FPM Group rides a winning streak for the Air Force; Duratek speeds up cleanups under performance mandate; S.M. Stoller mounts a big comeback thanks to federal partnering. (Page 13-21)
Association Profiles: Small Environmental Business Action Coalition advocates the role of small companies in federal contracting; American Council of Engineering Companies targets Iraq, infrastructure and outsourcing opportunities. (Page 21-23)
EBJ Stock Reporter: First quarter analysis of the EBJ Index yields mixed results; USFilter goes to Siemens and GE branches into APC and solar. (Page 24-27)
EBJ's Site Remediation 2004 (Volume XVII, No. 1/2, 2004)
This issue of EBJ looks at the remediation sector from the perspective of redevelopment and community revitalization - How the brownfields market has evolved, and how the remediation services component has adjusted to the underlying real estate driver.
In This Issue:
Brownfields & Redevelopment Overview: The remediation market has undergone a gradual shift from cleanups driven by regulation to the growing influence of economic drivers like corporate liability and municipal redevelopment. (Page 1-3)
The Brownfields Market evolves but is a long way from mature, says publisher of Brownfields News. (Page 4-5)
The Portsfields Initiative focuses on redevelopment of high-value waterfront property with the ICMA and leading consultants Weston and Jones & Stokes getting involved. (Page 5-7)
The Restoration Economy author calls for higher standards and better integration in redevelopment; sets up project certification program. (Page 8-9)
Redevelopment projects benefit from increased involvement of traditional sources of development funding and specialists in real estate damage economics. (Page 9-11)
Profiles in redevelopment consulting: ARCADIS, Renova Partners, TRC Companies, LFR, Brownfield Partners, Panther Technologies, AMEC, EWMA and Parametrix all see avenues to success in redevelopment. (Page 12-21)
Policy analyst from the Northeast-Midwest Institute assesses the near-term future for funding and financial incentives for brownfields. (Page 22-23)
EBJ Stock Reporter: Performance of the EBJ Index is analyzed in 2003 and from 1991-2003; 14% gain in fourth quarter finishes a healthy 33% gain for 2003 for the EBJ. (Page 24-27)
EBJ's Site Remediation 2003 (Volume XV, No. 9/10, 2003)
The $6+ billion U.S. remediation market has been recovering steadily but the current size is still smaller than what is was in 1993. The federal agencies are providing a stable submarket, though DOE's contractors have become an "exclusive club." Privately-funded market is showing even more signs of recovery, and some still see the brownfield redevelopment as their star sector. What's a remediation firm to do?
In this issue, EBJ reexamines the current status of the remediation market with varying points of views from many key industry personnel. Market data from the 2003 survey results are presented throughout the feature article.
In This Issue:
Remediation & Redevelopment Overview: Cleanup contractors find some stability and recovery in remediation markets in 2002 with government markets, development drivers and ‘cost-based’ standards leading the way. (Page 1-5)
The Restoration Economy: Author Storm Cunningham sets out to define the term sustainable development, but instead discovers ‘restorative development’ as the defining trend in the global economy. (Page 6-8)
Market Features: DOD markets look to surge with an emphasis on UXO; mold emerges as a legitimate market; Brownfields case study shows its all in the process. (Page 9-21)
Remediation Company Profiles: A variety of contracting mechanisms, customer focus areas and technologies define competitive angle for Environmental Quality Management, SLR International, Sub-Surface Waste Management, LVI Services, The Whitman Companies, Weston Solutions, The Forrester Group, Portage Environmental, TRC Companies and DOE’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. (Page 22-31)
EBJ issues are NOT a downloadable item. Electronic versions of each EBJ issue are available only to corporate EBJ subscribers that have registered and signed a license agreement. If you order this issue as a non-subscriber, you will receive a copy by mail in five to seven business days.
EBJ's Annual Review of the U.S. Remediation & Redeveloment Industry 2006 (Volume XIX, No. 3/4, 2006)
Table of Contents:
Remediation & Redevelopment Overview: The $7-billion U.S. remediation market continues to shift towards redevelopment; EBJ presents new data on market size and trends in technology, with survey results on win rates and contracts. (Page 1-4)
The Brownfields Market is robust, says publisher of Brownfields News, with many factors contributing to sustained growth and opportunity. (Page 5-6)
A brief history of Superfund; executives debate its relevance and future. (Page 6-9)
DOD’s BRAC V promises a new round of closures and cleanups: Includes list of bases set for closure and for realignment. (Page 10-15)
U.S. redevelopment movement slow to pick up on the ‘integrated restoration’ model that is being developed with notable success in Canada and Europe. (Page 15-17)
Detailed Company Profiles in remediation & redevelopment: Tetra Tech, O’Neill Properties, Terracon, PDG Environmental, Creamer Environmental, Atwell-Hicks, Brownfield Associates, Trihydro, Maser Consulting and Terrasure reveal a wide variety of companies and approaches to an evolving market. (Page 18-31)
Exhibits Featured in this Issue:
The U.S. Remediation Market, Total Revenues, 1988-2006: Redevelopment vs. Remediation
Remediation Technology Trends 1998-2006: Results of EBJ Annual Surveys on Technologies Applied in Soil Remediation and Groundwater Treatment
The U.S. Remediation Market, Total Revenues, 1995-2005: by program area (DOD, DOE, Superfund, USTs, etc) and project phase
Remediation Project Award Win Rates: Private and Public Sector 2100, 2003 and 2005: Results of EBJ Annual Surveys of Remediation Contractors
Remediation Projects by Pricing or Contract Mechanism (T&M, fixed price, etc.)
Superfund by the Numbers
BRAC V: Major Closures and Major Realignments
Remediation Industry Challenges in 2006: Comments from EBJ Annual Surveys of Remediation Contractors
Remediation Company Challenges in 2006: Comments from EBJ Annual Surveys of Remediation Contractors
EDR Annual Salary Survey: 2005 Results
Companies Featured in this Issue:
ARCADIS Atwell-Hicks Inc. Base Realignment and Closure Commission Belfor USA Brownfield Associates Inc. Brownfield News C.E. Spurlock Jr. & Associates Canadian Urban Institute Center for Health Environment & Justice Cherokee Investment Partners Creamer Environmental Inc. Department of Defense Earth Tech Environmental Business International Inc. Environmental Data Resources Inc. EPA Federal Aviation Administration Flagship Services Group Foster Wheeler Frenkel & Co. Inc Gannett Fleming General Services Administration Holguin Fahan & Associates Inc. InStar Services Group Inc J. Fletcher Creamer & Son LVI Services Inc Manko Gold Katcher & Fox Marine Corps Marstel-Day LLC Maser Consulting P.A. National Brownfield Association National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform Standards National Park Service Naval Facilities Engineering Command-SW Noisette Co. Office of Technology Assessment O’Neill Properties Group LP PDG Environmental Inc. Property and Environment Research Center Resources for the Future Revitalization Institute Seneca College ServiceMaster Terracon Consultants Inc. Terradex TerraSure Tetra Tech Inc. Trihydro Corp U.S. Green Building Cou
Federal Remediation Overview: The $6.3-billion remediation market has seen an increasing share from federal markets. Accelerated cleanup programs and outsourcing initiatives have been good for contractors who are branching into environmental work for other agencies. (Page 1-5)
DOD and DOE get serious about small business contracting, work out kinks with ID/IQ contract vehicles. (Page 6-8)
Resource Management Plans and GSA contracts become the entry points for federal work for Bureau of Land Management and other agencies; Jones & Stokes, SWCA and ENSR all work the land-use market. (Page 9-12)
Company Profiles: SWCA Environmental Consultants fills a dominant role in western resource management plans; Shaw E&I maintains a load of federal work and chase Iraq opportunities; TolTest takes on a WERC contract; Sullivan Consulting Group rides federal work and an acquisition to phenomenal growth; FPM Group rides a winning streak for the Air Force; Duratek speeds up cleanups under performance mandate; S.M. Stoller mounts a big comeback thanks to federal partnering. (Page 13-21)
Association Profiles: Small Environmental Business Action Coalition advocates the role of small companies in federal contracting; American Council of Engineering Companies targets Iraq, infrastructure and outsourcing opportunities. (Page 21-23)
EBJ Stock Reporter: First quarter analysis of the EBJ Index yields mixed results; USFilter goes to Siemens and GE branches into APC and solar. (Page 24-27)
Exhibits Featured in this Issue:
Federal Government Contribution to US Remediation Market, 1988 - 2003 (area chart; DOD & DOE, Superfund, Other)
US Site Remediation Market, 1993-2003 (table)
US Site Remediation Market, 1988-2003: Construction/Closure & Monitoring v. Consulting & Engineering (bar chart)
EBJ's Top Remediation Firms, 2003 (list)
Distribution of US Remediation Companies, 2003 (table)
Remediation Technology Trends, 1992-2004 (table)
Remediation Project Award Rates, 2001 and 2003 (table)
Remediation Projects by Pricing Mechanism (pie chart)
Top Federal Remediation Contractors (list)
Companies Featured in this Issue:
Al-Khudhairy Group AMEC Earth & Environmental American Bailey Corp American Council of Engineering Companies Anteon Corp. Arthur Langhus Layne AstroPower Inc. Battelle BayWest Inc. Bear West Co. Bechtel National BEM Systems Berger/Abam Engineers Betz Dearborn BHA Group Holdings Black & Veatch Black & Veatch Special Projects Corp. Blackhawk GeoServices Booz Allen Hamilton Burns & McDonnell Burns and Roe Enterprises Cabrera Services Inc. Cape Environmental CH2M Hill Conti Environmental Contracting & Construction Enterprises Custom Mechanical Systems Danaher Corp. DENTSPLY International Inc. Dionex Duratek Inc. EA Engineering, Science & Technology Earth Tech EDAW EG&G Technical Services ENSR International Inc. Envirogen Environmental Chemical Corp. Everpure Foster Wheeler Environmental FPM Group FPM Remediations Fuel Tech NV Gendex Division General Electric General Services Administration Glegg Water Systems Gundle Environmental Systems Harris Corp. Industrial Services of America INTERA Isco Inc IT Group, The ITT Industries Jacobs Engineering Group Jones & Stokes Kaltenbach & Voigt GmbH Kharafi International Millipore MWH Americas Inc. Navarro Research and Engineering NESMA Nuclear Fuel Services Osmonics Pacific Treatment Environmental Services Pall Corp Pangea Inc. Peerless Mfg Co Pentair Portage Environmental R&R International S.M. Stoller Corp. , The SAIC Shaw Environmental & Infrastructure Siemens AG Small Environmental Business Action Coalition Stanley Consultants STEP Inc. Stoller-Navarro Stone & Webster Sullivan Consulting Group SWCA Environmental Consultants Tank Construction Services Terra Nova Planning & Research Tetra Tech TolTest Inc. United Enviro-Tech URS Corp. USA Environmental USFilter Veolia Water Infrastructure Network Weston Solutions WRS Infrastructure & Environment
EBJ's Site Remediation 2004 (Volume XVII, No. 1/2, 2004)
Table of Contents:
Brownfields & Redevelopment Overview: The remediation market has undergone a gradual shift from cleanups driven by regulation to the growing influence of economic drivers like corporate liability and municipal redevelopment. (Page 1-3)
The Brownfields Market evolves but is a long way from mature, says publisher of Brownfields News. (Page 4-5)
The Portsfields Initiative focuses on redevelopment of high-value waterfront property with the ICMA and leading consultants Weston and Jones & Stokes getting involved. (Page 5-7)
The Restoration Economy author calls for higher standards and better integration in redevelopment; sets up project certification program. (Page 8-9)
Redevelopment projects benefit from increased involvement of traditional sources of development funding and specialists in real estate damage economics. (Page 9-11)
Profiles in redevelopment consulting: ARCADIS, Renova Partners, TRC Companies, LFR, Brownfield Partners, Panther Technologies, AMEC, EWMA and Parametrix all see avenues to success in redevelopment. (Page 12-21)
Policy analyst from the Northeast-Midwest Institute assesses the near-term future for funding and financial incentives for brownfields. (Page 22-23)
EBJ Stock Reporter: Performance of the EBJ Index is analyzed in 2003 and from 1991-2003; 14% gain in fourth quarter finishes a healthy 33% gain for 2003 for the EBJ. (Page 24-27)
Companies Featured in this Issue:
AMEC Earth & Environmental American Ecology Corp ARCADIS Bell Anderson & Sanders, LLC Brownfield News Brownfield Partners LLC BWX Technologies CH2M Hill Clean Harbors Inc. Clemson University Environmental Waste Management Associates ERM ICMA International City/County Management Assn Jerde Partnership Jones & Stokes LandBank Inc. LFR Levine-Fricke Mark Briggs & Associates McDermott International Inc. Merritt+Pardini Millennia Associates Natural Logic Panther Technologies Inc. Parametrix Perma-Fix Environmental Services Renova Partners RestorAbility Inc. Revitalist Institute Rutgers University SECOR Shaw Group Tetra Tech Inc. Thermal Remediation Solutions TRC Companies Inc TRS U.S. Green Building Council University of Florida URS Corp. West Virginia University Weston Solutions Inc. Zurich North America
EBJ's Site Remediation 2003 (Volume XV, No. 9/10, 2003)
Table of Contents:
Remediation & Redevelopment Overview: Cleanup contractors find some stability and recovery in remediation markets in 2002 with government markets, development drivers and ‘cost-based’ standards leading the way. (Page 1-5)
The Restoration Economy: Author Storm Cunningham sets out to define the term sustainable development, but instead discovers ‘restorative development’ as the defining trend in the global economy. (Page 6-8)
Market Features: DOD markets look to surge with an emphasis on UXO; mold emerges as a legitimate market; Brownfields case study shows its all in the process. (Page 9-21)
Remediation Company Profiles: A variety of contracting mechanisms, customer focus areas and technologies define competitive angle for Environmental Quality Management, SLR International, Sub-Surface Waste Management, LVI Services, The Whitman Companies, Weston Solutions, The Forrester Group, Portage Environmental, TRC Companies and DOE’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. (Page 22-31)
Exhibits Featured in this Issue:
U.S. Remediation Industry by Project Activity (pie chart)
U.S. Site Remediation Market, 1993 - 2002 (by market type and project activity; table)
Remediation Technology Trends, 1992 - 2002 (number of applications by technology, in soil and water; table)
EBJ's Top Remediation Firms, 2001 (with remediation revenue in $million)
Distribution of Remediation Companies, 2001 (number of companies and revenues by size)
Superfund Accomplishments through FY 2002
EBJ's 2003 Remediation Opinion Survey Results
Companies Featured in this Issue:
American BioSystems Inc. American International Group Inc Armstrong Teasdale LLP AT Environmental LLC Battelle Blue Point Capital Partners BNIM Architects Brookhill Group BTI Consulting Group Burdco Burt Hill Kosar Rittelmann Associates Center for Public Environmental Oversight Certified Mold Inspectors and Contractors Institute Certified/LVI Environmental Cherokee Investment Partners Department of Housing and Urban Development ECS Marin EDAW Inc. Enviro-Mold IAQ Services Environmental Information Ltd Environmental Quality Management Inc. EQA Landmark Communities Foster Wheeler Environmental Corp GreenPark Remediation IBACOS International Assn of Mold Remediation Specialists Kurita LandBank Group Leppo Consultants LS3P Associates LVI Services Inc. LZA Technology MFG Inc. National Association of OEW Contractors New Jersey Business and Industry Assn Newkirk Environmental Noisette Co. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Permar, Ravenel & Associates Portage Environmental Inc Pratt-Thomas, Epting & Walker PA Resources for the Future Shaw Group SLR International Corp. Smith, Gambrell & Russell Sub-Surface Waste Management TEG/LVI Tetra Tech Inc. The Forrester Group The Whitman Companies Inc. TPA Design Group, Inc. TRC Companies Inc Turner Construction U.S. Microbics Inc. URS Corp. Warburg Pincus Weston & Sampson Engineers Inc. Weston Solutions Inc. XL Environmental Inc.
EBJ issues are NOT a downloadable item. Electronic versions of each EBJ issue are available only to corporate EBJ subscribers that have registered and signed a license agreement. If you order this issue as a non-subscriber, you will receive a copy by mail in five to seven business days.
EBJ's Annual Review of the U.S. Remediation & Redeveloment Industry 2006 (Volume XIX, No. 3/4, 2006)
Table of Contents:
Remediation & Redevelopment Overview: The $7-billion U.S. remediation market continues to shift towards redevelopment; EBJ presents new data on market size and trends in technology, with survey results on win rates and contracts. (Page 1-4)
The Brownfields Market is robust, says publisher of Brownfields News, with many factors contributing to sustained growth and opportunity. (Page 5-6)
A brief history of Superfund; executives debate its relevance and future. (Page 6-9)
DOD’s BRAC V promises a new round of closures and cleanups: Includes list of bases set for closure and for realignment. (Page 10-15)
U.S. redevelopment movement slow to pick up on the ‘integrated restoration’ model that is being developed with notable success in Canada and Europe. (Page 15-17)
Detailed Company Profiles in remediation & redevelopment: Tetra Tech, O’Neill Properties, Terracon, PDG Environmental, Creamer Environmental, Atwell-Hicks, Brownfield Associates, Trihydro, Maser Consulting and Terrasure reveal a wide variety of companies and approaches to an evolving market. (Page 18-31)
Exhibits Featured in this Issue:
The U.S. Remediation Market, Total Revenues, 1988-2006: Redevelopment vs. Remediation
Remediation Technology Trends 1998-2006: Results of EBJ Annual Surveys on Technologies Applied in Soil Remediation and Groundwater Treatment
The U.S. Remediation Market, Total Revenues, 1995-2005: by program area (DOD, DOE, Superfund, USTs, etc) and project phase
Remediation Project Award Win Rates: Private and Public Sector 2100, 2003 and 2005: Results of EBJ Annual Surveys of Remediation Contractors
Remediation Projects by Pricing or Contract Mechanism (T&M, fixed price, etc.)
Superfund by the Numbers
BRAC V: Major Closures and Major Realignments
Remediation Industry Challenges in 2006: Comments from EBJ Annual Surveys of Remediation Contractors
Remediation Company Challenges in 2006: Comments from EBJ Annual Surveys of Remediation Contractors
EDR Annual Salary Survey: 2005 Results
Companies Featured in this Issue:
ARCADIS Atwell-Hicks Inc. Base Realignment and Closure Commission Belfor USA Brownfield Associates Inc. Brownfield News C.E. Spurlock Jr. & Associates Canadian Urban Institute Center for Health Environment & Justice Cherokee Investment Partners Creamer Environmental Inc. Department of Defense Earth Tech Environmental Business International Inc. Environmental Data Resources Inc. EPA Federal Aviation Administration Flagship Services Group Foster Wheeler Frenkel & Co. Inc Gannett Fleming General Services Administration Holguin Fahan & Associates Inc. InStar Services Group Inc J. Fletcher Creamer & Son LVI Services Inc Manko Gold Katcher & Fox Marine Corps Marstel-Day LLC Maser Consulting P.A. National Brownfield Association National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform Standards National Park Service Naval Facilities Engineering Command-SW Noisette Co. Office of Technology Assessment O’Neill Properties Group LP PDG Environmental Inc. Property and Environment Research Center Resources for the Future Revitalization Institute Seneca College ServiceMaster Terracon Consultants Inc. Terradex TerraSure Tetra Tech Inc. Trihydro Corp U.S. Green Building Cou
Federal Remediation Overview: The $6.3-billion remediation market has seen an increasing share from federal markets. Accelerated cleanup programs and outsourcing initiatives have been good for contractors who are branching into environmental work for other agencies. (Page 1-5)
DOD and DOE get serious about small business contracting, work out kinks with ID/IQ contract vehicles. (Page 6-8)
Resource Management Plans and GSA contracts become the entry points for federal work for Bureau of Land Management and other agencies; Jones & Stokes, SWCA and ENSR all work the land-use market. (Page 9-12)
Company Profiles: SWCA Environmental Consultants fills a dominant role in western resource management plans; Shaw E&I maintains a load of federal work and chase Iraq opportunities; TolTest takes on a WERC contract; Sullivan Consulting Group rides federal work and an acquisition to phenomenal growth; FPM Group rides a winning streak for the Air Force; Duratek speeds up cleanups under performance mandate; S.M. Stoller mounts a big comeback thanks to federal partnering. (Page 13-21)
Association Profiles: Small Environmental Business Action Coalition advocates the role of small companies in federal contracting; American Council of Engineering Companies targets Iraq, infrastructure and outsourcing opportunities. (Page 21-23)
EBJ Stock Reporter: First quarter analysis of the EBJ Index yields mixed results; USFilter goes to Siemens and GE branches into APC and solar. (Page 24-27)
Exhibits Featured in this Issue:
Federal Government Contribution to US Remediation Market, 1988 - 2003 (area chart; DOD & DOE, Superfund, Other)
US Site Remediation Market, 1993-2003 (table)
US Site Remediation Market, 1988-2003: Construction/Closure & Monitoring v. Consulting & Engineering (bar chart)
EBJ's Top Remediation Firms, 2003 (list)
Distribution of US Remediation Companies, 2003 (table)
Remediation Technology Trends, 1992-2004 (table)
Remediation Project Award Rates, 2001 and 2003 (table)
Remediation Projects by Pricing Mechanism (pie chart)
Top Federal Remediation Contractors (list)
Companies Featured in this Issue:
Al-Khudhairy Group AMEC Earth & Environmental American Bailey Corp American Council of Engineering Companies Anteon Corp. Arthur Langhus Layne AstroPower Inc. Battelle BayWest Inc. Bear West Co. Bechtel National BEM Systems Berger/Abam Engineers Betz Dearborn BHA Group Holdings Black & Veatch Black & Veatch Special Projects Corp. Blackhawk GeoServices Booz Allen Hamilton Burns & McDonnell Burns and Roe Enterprises Cabrera Services Inc. Cape Environmental CH2M Hill Conti Environmental Contracting & Construction Enterprises Custom Mechanical Systems Danaher Corp. DENTSPLY International Inc. Dionex Duratek Inc. EA Engineering, Science & Technology Earth Tech EDAW EG&G Technical Services ENSR International Inc. Envirogen Environmental Chemical Corp. Everpure Foster Wheeler Environmental FPM Group FPM Remediations Fuel Tech NV Gendex Division General Electric General Services Administration Glegg Water Systems Gundle Environmental Systems Harris Corp. Industrial Services of America INTERA Isco Inc IT Group, The ITT Industries Jacobs Engineering Group Jones & Stokes Kaltenbach & Voigt GmbH Kharafi International Millipore MWH Americas Inc. Navarro Research and Engineering NESMA Nuclear Fuel Services Osmonics Pacific Treatment Environmental Services Pall Corp Pangea Inc. Peerless Mfg Co Pentair Portage Environmental R&R International S.M. Stoller Corp. , The SAIC Shaw Environmental & Infrastructure Siemens AG Small Environmental Business Action Coalition Stanley Consultants STEP Inc. Stoller-Navarro Stone & Webster Sullivan Consulting Group SWCA Environmental Consultants Tank Construction Services Terra Nova Planning & Research Tetra Tech TolTest Inc. United Enviro-Tech URS Corp. USA Environmental USFilter Veolia Water Infrastructure Network Weston Solutions WRS Infrastructure & Environment
EBJ's Site Remediation 2004 (Volume XVII, No. 1/2, 2004)
Table of Contents:
Brownfields & Redevelopment Overview: The remediation market has undergone a gradual shift from cleanups driven by regulation to the growing influence of economic drivers like corporate liability and municipal redevelopment. (Page 1-3)
The Brownfields Market evolves but is a long way from mature, says publisher of Brownfields News. (Page 4-5)
The Portsfields Initiative focuses on redevelopment of high-value waterfront property with the ICMA and leading consultants Weston and Jones & Stokes getting involved. (Page 5-7)
The Restoration Economy author calls for higher standards and better integration in redevelopment; sets up project certification program. (Page 8-9)
Redevelopment projects benefit from increased involvement of traditional sources of development funding and specialists in real estate damage economics. (Page 9-11)
Profiles in redevelopment consulting: ARCADIS, Renova Partners, TRC Companies, LFR, Brownfield Partners, Panther Technologies, AMEC, EWMA and Parametrix all see avenues to success in redevelopment. (Page 12-21)
Policy analyst from the Northeast-Midwest Institute assesses the near-term future for funding and financial incentives for brownfields. (Page 22-23)
EBJ Stock Reporter: Performance of the EBJ Index is analyzed in 2003 and from 1991-2003; 14% gain in fourth quarter finishes a healthy 33% gain for 2003 for the EBJ. (Page 24-27)
Companies Featured in this Issue:
AMEC Earth & Environmental American Ecology Corp ARCADIS Bell Anderson & Sanders, LLC Brownfield News Brownfield Partners LLC BWX Technologies CH2M Hill Clean Harbors Inc. Clemson University Environmental Waste Management Associates ERM ICMA International City/County Management Assn Jerde Partnership Jones & Stokes LandBank Inc. LFR Levine-Fricke Mark Briggs & Associates McDermott International Inc. Merritt+Pardini Millennia Associates Natural Logic Panther Technologies Inc. Parametrix Perma-Fix Environmental Services Renova Partners RestorAbility Inc. Revitalist Institute Rutgers University SECOR Shaw Group Tetra Tech Inc. Thermal Remediation Solutions TRC Companies Inc TRS U.S. Green Building Council University of Florida URS Corp. West Virginia University Weston Solutions Inc. Zurich North America
EBJ's Site Remediation 2003 (Volume XV, No. 9/10, 2003)
Table of Contents:
Remediation & Redevelopment Overview: Cleanup contractors find some stability and recovery in remediation markets in 2002 with government markets, development drivers and ‘cost-based’ standards leading the way. (Page 1-5)
The Restoration Economy: Author Storm Cunningham sets out to define the term sustainable development, but instead discovers ‘restorative development’ as the defining trend in the global economy. (Page 6-8)
Market Features: DOD markets look to surge with an emphasis on UXO; mold emerges as a legitimate market; Brownfields case study shows its all in the process. (Page 9-21)
Remediation Company Profiles: A variety of contracting mechanisms, customer focus areas and technologies define competitive angle for Environmental Quality Management, SLR International, Sub-Surface Waste Management, LVI Services, The Whitman Companies, Weston Solutions, The Forrester Group, Portage Environmental, TRC Companies and DOE’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. (Page 22-31)
Exhibits Featured in this Issue:
U.S. Remediation Industry by Project Activity (pie chart)
U.S. Site Remediation Market, 1993 - 2002 (by market type and project activity; table)
Remediation Technology Trends, 1992 - 2002 (number of applications by technology, in soil and water; table)
EBJ's Top Remediation Firms, 2001 (with remediation revenue in $million)
Distribution of Remediation Companies, 2001 (number of companies and revenues by size)
Superfund Accomplishments through FY 2002
EBJ's 2003 Remediation Opinion Survey Results
Companies Featured in this Issue:
American BioSystems Inc. American International Group Inc Armstrong Teasdale LLP AT Environmental LLC Battelle Blue Point Capital Partners BNIM Architects Brookhill Group BTI Consulting Group Burdco Burt Hill Kosar Rittelmann Associates Center for Public Environmental Oversight Certified Mold Inspectors and Contractors Institute Certified/LVI Environmental Cherokee Investment Partners Department of Housing and Urban Development ECS Marin EDAW Inc. Enviro-Mold IAQ Services Environmental Information Ltd Environmental Quality Management Inc. EQA Landmark Communities Foster Wheeler Environmental Corp GreenPark Remediation IBACOS International Assn of Mold Remediation Specialists Kurita LandBank Group Leppo Consultants LS3P Associates LVI Services Inc. LZA Technology MFG Inc. National Association of OEW Contractors New Jersey Business and Industry Assn Newkirk Environmental Noisette Co. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Permar, Ravenel & Associates Portage Environmental Inc Pratt-Thomas, Epting & Walker PA Resources for the Future Shaw Group SLR International Corp. Smith, Gambrell & Russell Sub-Surface Waste Management TEG/LVI Tetra Tech Inc. The Forrester Group The Whitman Companies Inc. TPA Design Group, Inc. TRC Companies Inc Turner Construction U.S. Microbics Inc. URS Corp. Warburg Pincus Weston & Sampson Engineers Inc. Weston Solutions Inc. XL Environmental Inc.
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