This 32-page issue of EBJ provides a statistical snapshot of the $265-billion U.S. environmental industry in 2005. The U.S. environmental industry grew 5.4% in 2005, its second consecutive year of over 5% growth. The environmental industry amounted to $264.6 billion in revenues in 2005 for the roughly 30,000 private companies and at least twice as many public sector entities in the business of selling environmental services, equipment or resources.
This annual overview issue of EBJ presents our comprehensive set of environmental industry statistics by segment, including revenues, growth, number of companies, employment, exports and a forecast for 2006-2010. This review also includes assessments of specific sectors hazardous waste, solid waste and analytical services, segments not afforded a more complete review of their own in dedicated issues of EBJ throughout the year.
In This Issue:
EBJ’s Environmental Industry Overview 2006: EBJ puts the industry into context, presents 2005 revenue and growth statistics for 14 segments; C&E firms share key trends. (Page 1-7)
Segment Reports: Sector profiles highlight developments in: Hazardous waste with reports on Clean Harbors, EnergySolutions and Perma-Fix (Page 8-12); Solid Waste & Recycing (Page 13-16); Waste Equipment and E-Waste (Page 16-17); and Analytical Services (Page 18-20). (Page 8-20)
Over the Horizon: Yale’s Dan Esty see a growing framework for generators to obtain eco-advantage in Green-to-Gold; a founding father of EBJ integrates skills into the investment group GreenSource; and GreenShift undertakes a four-pronged approach out of waste and in to clean technology. (Page 20-27)
EBJ Stock Reporter: A look back at the first half of 2006 reveals some surprises. (Page 28-31)
EBJ's Industry Overview 2005 (Volume XVIII, No. 7/8, 2005)
For nearly two decades, growth of the environmental industry has followed roughly three- to five- year business cycles. A close look at the historical data, however, reveals that some segments such as recycling are more volatile than others...
This issue presents EBJ's annual industry revenue data and current state of various industry segments, with select CEOs' recent experiences and expectations.
In This Issue:
EBJ 2004 Overview: EBJ presents revenue statistics for the environmental industry’s 14 segments and C&E firms share key trends for 2005. (Page 1-3)
Business Features: Segment profiles highlight developments and opportunities in: Cultural resources (Page 4-5); Hazardous waste (Page 5-7); Reverse auctions (Page 8-9); Testing services (Page 10-13); and Resource recovery (Page 14-17). (Page 4-17)
Generator Profiles: EH&S leaders HP, Xerox, Baxter, Exelon and GM discuss management, strategy and use of contractors. (Page 18-23)
Opportunities: Homeland security market evolving as DHS gets some traction; China emerges as the world’s largest growth opportunity; and BRAC V is shaping up as the ultimate high-stakes brownfield market. (Page 24-31)
EBJ's Industry Overview 2004 (Volume XVII, No. 9/10, 2004)
This issues reviews the current state of the US environmental industry and also covers the industry segments which were not thoroughly covered by EBJ in recent issues (haz waste, labs, abatement, recycling and waste equipment). The $230+ billion US environmental industry accounted for 2.2% of the GDP in 2003. This figure has been stable for several years now and proves the industry's close link to the US economy.
In This Issue:
Environmental Industry Overview: The $231-billion U.S. environmental industry exhibits a state of a stable maturity; observers weigh in on policy trajectories; executives of consulting & engineering firms comment on the state of the industry. (Page 1-8)
Hazardous waste firms soldier on in a difficult market; Ross, WCS and GEM take different paths in the competitive market. (Page 9-15)
Environmental testing stabilizes in revenues and top companies as sample volumes grow; Metropolitan Labs invests in internal resources; TestAmerica attracts private equity; Accutest pursues expansion; and AXYS embraces data justifiability. (Page 16-22)
USFilter increases global aspirations following its acquisition by Siemens. (Page 23)
Recycling & WME: Exports balance a flat domestic market in recyclables; equipment firms experience a turnaround and some shakeout. (Page 24-25)
Abatement contractors compete in a fragmented, regional market. (Page 26-27)
EBJ Stock Reporter: Third quarter analysis finds indices down; M&As profiled. (Page 28-31)
EBJ's Industry Overview 2003 (Volume XVI, No. 5/6, 2003)
The U.S. environmental industry's share of GDP has fallen over time, and it has become much more sensitive to the prevailing economic condition. But many executives agree that the year 2002 was a full of pleasant surprises - Despite the slowdown of the U.S. economy, projects kept coming.
The latest annual industry overview issue of EBJ assesses the $220-billion industry with the latest market figures. Also found in this issue are reviews of the industry segments which were not thoroughly covered by EBJ in recent issues (haz waste, labs, instruments and air pollution equipment).
In This Issue:
Overview: EBJ presents its annual figures on the $220-billion environmental industry and lets a few executives let off steam in a challenging market. (Page 1-7)
C&E Perspective: A softening market in 2003 has experts concerned. (Page 8-9)
Hazardous Waste & Industrial Services: Haz waste markets hit a decade of doldrums; firms pursue survival in different forms, including a move to industrial services. (Page 10-14)
Environmental Testing: Labs face continued pressure in a stable market. (Page 15-19)
Instruments & Information: Global markets pace instrument growth and software providers still struggle to meet EH&S IT needs. (Page 20-22)
Air Quality Markets: Power plant needs stir the APC business and some generators invest ahead of the regs; Separation Technologies finds use for fly ash. (Page 23-25)
Process & Prevention Technology: Companies providing economic solutions with resource technology. (Page 26-27)
EBJ Stock Reporter: 2nd quarter and first half review. (Page 28-31)
EBJ's Industry Overview 2002 (Volume, XIV, No. 7/8, 2002)
The Industry Overview 2002 issue features EBJ's latest assessment of the $213-billion U.S. environmental industry. The aggregate growth of the 14 industry segments between 2000 and 2001 was modest: some view this as a sign of stability while the pessimists view it stagnation. EBJ's interviews with industry executives revealed that there was no substantive disapointment with the Bush Administration so far....
In This Issue:
Environmental Industry Overview & 2001 Results: EBJ's annual quantitative analysis of the environmental industry in 14 segments looks at the market from multiple prespectives: by function, by media, by customer and in growth cycles over time. Qualitative analysis in the form of free-flowing comments from nine senior executives reveals an industry gone from growth to stability, but a fairly clear picture of ehat it takes to succeed in the environmental industry. (Page 1-9)
Analytical Services: The much-affected environmental testing segment gets closer to the stability of full recovery after almost a decade of dynamic retrenchment. Leaders Pace, Sequoia, Simalabs, ALS and others discuss the current market. Segment analyst Steve Maxwell lists key trends and top labs. (Page 10-13)
Hazardous Waste: Experts assess the latest capacity adjustments in hazardous waste management, including Clean Harbors move to acquire the industrial waste division of Safety-Kleen. Profiles of Clean Harbors and regional player EQ reveal a market with opportunity for those willing to create novel client solutions. (Page 14-19)
Medical & Nuclear Waste: Stericycle remains top of the heap in a medical waste segment with considerable scope for growth. Low-level radioactive waste faces a familiar see-saw of pricing, volume and capacity adjustments. (Page 20-21)
Industry Perspective: Q&A with Stephen Andersen of Secor International shows considerable opportunity for the mid-sized firm. (Page 22-23)
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 three to five business days.
EBJ’s Environmental Industry Overview 2006: EBJ puts the industry into context, presents 2005 revenue and growth statistics for 14 segments; C&E firms share key trends. (Page 1-7)
Segment Reports: Sector profiles highlight developments in: Hazardous waste with reports on Clean Harbors, EnergySolutions and Perma-Fix (Page 8-12); Solid Waste & Recycing (Page 13-16); Waste Equipment and E-Waste (Page 16-17); and Analytical Services (Page 18-20). (Page 8-20)
Over the Horizon: Yale’s Dan Esty see a growing framework for generators to obtain eco-advantage in Green-to-Gold; a founding father of EBJ integrates skills into the investment group GreenSource; and GreenShift undertakes a four-pronged approach out of waste and in to clean technology. (Page 20-27)
EBJ Stock Reporter: A look back at the first half of 2006 reveals some surprises. (Page 28-31)
Exhibits Featured in this Issue:
Environmental Industry growth vs. GDP growth: 1971-2005
The U.S. Environmental Industry in 2004-2005 and growth by 14 Segments ($bil)
U.S. Environmental Industry: Revenues by Function: Compliance, pollution control & remediation vs Environmental infrastructure/operation & maintenance vs. Resource Productivity
The U.S. Environmental Industry 2005: Companies & Employment
2005 US Environmental Trade Balance: Exports and Imports by Segment
Hazardous Waste Management in 2005 ($mil in commercial revenues)
Top Firms in Commercial Market for Industrial Hazardous Waste Management in 2005
Structure of U.S. Solid Waste Industry: 2005
Shares of U.S. Solid Waste Industry: 2005
Waste Management Equipment: US Revenues $mil 1988-2005
Top 20 U.S. Environmental Labs in 2005
EBJ's Industry Overview 2005 (Volume XVIII, No. 7/8, 2005)
Table of Contents:
EBJ 2004 Overview: EBJ presents revenue statistics for the environmental industry’s 14 segments and C&E firms share key trends for 2005. (Page 1-3)
Business Features: Segment profiles highlight developments and opportunities in: Cultural resources (Page 4-5); Hazardous waste (Page 5-7); Reverse auctions (Page 8-9); Testing services (Page 10-13); and Resource recovery (Page 14-17). (Page 4-17)
Generator Profiles: EH&S leaders HP, Xerox, Baxter, Exelon and GM discuss management, strategy and use of contractors. (Page 18-23)
Opportunities: Homeland security market evolving as DHS gets some traction; China emerges as the world’s largest growth opportunity; and BRAC V is shaping up as the ultimate high-stakes brownfield market. (Page 24-31)
Exhibits Featured in this Issue:
U.S. Industry Growth 1998 - 2004
U.S. Environmental Industry by Segment, 2003 - 2004
Top 20 Environmental Laboratory Firms, 2004
Top 20 Labs by Productivity
U.S. Resource Recovery Revenues, 2003 - 2004
Annual Revenue Change in U.S. Resource Recovery, 1993 - 2004
Companies Featured in this Issue:
Aerotech Laboratories Inc. AMEC Earth & Environmental Baxter International Inc. Browning-Ferris International Cedar Grove Composting CERES CH2M Hill Chambers Group Inc. Clean Harbors Inc. ComED Curtis & Tompkins Ltd. Dell Computer Delta Environmental Consultants Earth Tech Ecology & Environment Inc. En Chem Environmental Microbiology Laboratory Inc. ET ENVIRONMENTAL Exelon Corp. Farkas Berkowitz & Co. General Engineering Laboratories General Environmental Management General Motors Corp. Global Environmental Management Initiative Hewlett-Packard Homeland Energy Resources Development Inc. Image Microsystems INFICON Intechra LLC Jacobs Engineering Group
Jepsen Prairie Organic JG Press Maxxam Analytics International Corp. Metal Management Inc. Mittal Group MWH Labs Norcal Waste Systems Inc. Nucor Corp. Onyx Environmental Services Parsons Corp. Parsons Infrastructure & Technology Group Inc. PECO Philip Services Corp. PSC Analytical Services Public Service Enterprise Group Inc. Ross Environmental Inc. Safety-Kleen Systems Inc. San-I-Pak Inc. SECOR International Sentex Systems Inc. Sequoia Laboratory Network Sharps Compliance Inc. Sims Group Sims Recycling Solutions SonTek Inc. Stablex Canada Inc. Stericycle Corp. STL Inc. Suez TechKNOWLEDGEy Strategic Group Teris LLC TestAmerica Environmental Services Tetra Tech Inc. Veolia Versar Inc. Waste Management Inc. Weston Solutions Inc. WorldWater & Power Corp. WTI Xerox YSI Environmental ZymaX envirotechnology
EBJ's Industry Overview 2004 (Volume XVII, No. 9/10, 2004)
Table of Contents:
Environmental Industry Overview: The $231-billion U.S. environmental industry exhibits a state of a stable maturity; observers weigh in on policy trajectories; executives of consulting & engineering firms comment on the state of the industry. (Page 1-8)
Hazardous waste firms soldier on in a difficult market; Ross, WCS and GEM take different paths in the competitive market. (Page 9-15)
Environmental testing stabilizes in revenues and top companies as sample volumes grow; Metropolitan Labs invests in internal resources; TestAmerica attracts private equity; Accutest pursues expansion; and AXYS embraces data justifiability. (Page 16-22)
USFilter increases global aspirations following its acquisition by Siemens. (Page 23)
Recycling & WME: Exports balance a flat domestic market in recyclables; equipment firms experience a turnaround and some shakeout. (Page 24-25)
Abatement contractors compete in a fragmented, regional market. (Page 26-27)
EBJ Stock Reporter: Third quarter analysis finds indices down; M&As profiled. (Page 28-31)
Companies Featured in this Issue:
3E Company Abatix Corp. Accutest Laboratories AECOM Technology Corp. Aerotech Labs American Ecology American Ecology Corp. American Water Analytica, Inc. Applied Earth Sciences Aqua America Inc. ARCADIS NV Aulson Co. AXYS Analytical Services Ltd. AXYS Group BEM Systems Chem-Nuclear Systems Clayton, Dubilier & Rice Clean Harbors Inc. Commercial Metals CST Environmental Inc. Culligan International Danaher Corp. DataChem Dell Inc. Delta Environmental Consultants Duratek Inc. Eagle Construction and Environmental Services Earth Tech Eastman Chemical Co EISC EMLab Envirocare of Utah Environmental Information Ltd. Environmental Safety Systems Environmental Technology Council EQ-The Environmental Quality Co. ERM-West Everpure Fairhill Fabricators Farkas Berkowitz & Co. Garner Environmental Services Inc. General Environmental Management Inc. General Pacific Partners LLC Geotechnical and Environmental Consultants H.I.G. Capital Hanover Square Partners Heritage Environmental Services Hewlett-Packard Hi-Rise Recycling Companies Hydrochem Hydromet Environmental Recovery Ltd. Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries InteGreyted International KANNS Kenny Industrial Services Kleen All of America Lamanco Lang Environmental League of Conservation Voters LFR Levine-Fricke Louisiana Energy Services LVI Services Inc. MARCOR Remediation Inc. McClain Industries Metropolitan Laboratories Inc. Microbac Laboratories Northern Testing Onyx Environmental Services Pace Analytical Services Paragon Analytics PDG Environmental Inc. Pentair Inc. Perma-Fix Environmental Services Philip Services Corp. Pollution Control Industries Inc. Profil PT&L Contracting QC Laboratories REP America Resource Recycling Resources for the Future RJM Waste Equipment Co. Ross Environmental Services Inc. SA&B Environmental & Chemical Consultants Safety-Kleen Corp. Sequoia Network Severn Trent Laboratories Siemens AG Stericycle Corp. SUEZ Environnement Tampa Bay Water TechKNOWLEDGEy Strategic Group TestAmerica Inc. Tetra Technology Trojan Technologies Inc U.S. Agency for International Development U.S. Liquids UMA Group Ltd. USFilter Valhi Inc. Veolia Environnement Waste Control Specialists LLC Waste Management Inc. Waste Services, Inc. Waste Technology Corp. WASTEC Wastequip Inc. White Rose Environmental Ltd
EBJ's Industry Overview 2003 (Volume XVI, No. 5/6, 2003)
Table of Contents:
Overview: EBJ presents its annual figures on the $220-billion environmental industry and lets a few executives let off steam in a challenging market. (Page 1-7)
C&E Perspective: A softening market in 2003 has experts concerned. (Page 8-9)
Hazardous Waste & Industrial Services: Haz waste markets hit a decade of doldrums; firms pursue survival in different forms, including a move to industrial services. (Page 10-14)
Environmental Testing: Labs face continued pressure in a stable market. (Page 15-19)
Instruments & Information: Global markets pace instrument growth and software providers still struggle to meet EH&S IT needs. (Page 20-22)
Air Quality Markets: Power plant needs stir the APC business and some generators invest ahead of the regs; Separation Technologies finds use for fly ash. (Page 23-25)
Process & Prevention Technology: Companies providing economic solutions with resource technology. (Page 26-27)
EBJ Stock Reporter: 2nd quarter and first half review. (Page 28-31)
Exhibits Featured in this Issue:
The U.S. Environemntal Industry as a Percent of GDP (Bar chart; 1970, 1980, 1990, 2000 and 2002)
The U.S. Environmental Industry Revenus and Growth (Data by segment; 1970, 1980, 1990, 2000, 2001 and 2002)
2002 U.S. Environmental Industry Economic Profile (Data by segment; Revenue, No. of Companies, No. of Jobs, Average Annual Growth 2003-06)
Hazardous Waste/Wastewater Shipped to Commercial Facilities (Bar chart; by facility type)
Top Laboratory Analytical and Life Sciences Instrument Makers ($mil U.S.)
Emissions Control Projects at U.S. Coal-Fired Power Plants
A Sampling of Resource Recovery and Prevention Technology Providers
Companies Featured in this Issue:
ADA Technologies Advanced Environmental Recycling Technologies AEA Technology plc Aerotech Laboratories Inc. Agilent Technologies Alcoa American Ecology Inc. American Electric Power BHA Group Holdings Inc. Brown & Caldwell Clean Environment Equipment Clean Harbors Inc. Columbia Analytical Services Inc. Corning Inc. DataChem Laboratories Inc. Dominion’s Virginia Electric Power Company Donaldson Company Donley Technology Inc. Energy Laboratories Inc. ENSR International Inc. Environmental Elements Corp. Environmental Financial Consulting Group Inc. (EFCG) Environmental Information Ltd. Environmental Support Solutions ERM ERP Environmental Services Exergy Technologies Corp. Farkas Berkowitz & Co. Fluor Corp. Fuel- N.V. General Tech Electric Gideon Informatics GZA GeoEnvironmental H.I.G. Capital of Florida Haestad Methods Hake Group Hewlett-Packard Hudson Technologies HydroChem IMCO Recycling InteGreyted Consultants Ion Track Jacobs Engineering Group K2 Industrial Services KBF Pollution Management Inc. Keltic Financial Partners L.P. Kettle Valley Dried Fruit Ltd. Kleinfelder Inc. Lexware International Matrix Service McIlvaine Co. Membrane Technology & Research Microbac Laboratories North Creek Analytical Inc. Nova Analytics Corp. Onyx Environmental Services LLC Opta Food Ingredients P&K Microbiology Services Peerless Manufacturing Co. PerkinElmer Life & Analyt. Sci. Perma-Fix Environmental Svcs Philip Services Corp. Progress Materials Inc. QED Environmental Systems Resource Recycling Rhodia Eco Services Separation Technologies Inc. Sequoia Analytical Severn-Trent Laboratories Inc. Simply Organic Ltd. SITA Southern Indiana Gas & Electric Co. Stake Technology Ltd. Stericycle Strategic Directions International TechKNOWLEDGEy Strategic Group Teledyne Technologies Inc. Tennessee Valley Authority Teris LLC The BOC Group Titan America Veridium Environmental Corp. Weiss Associates Wild West Organic Harvest Co-Operative Association Wisconsin Electric Power Co. WRS Infrastructure & Environment ZweigWhite
EBJ's Industry Overview 2002 (Volume, XIV, No. 7/8, 2002)
Table of Contents:
Environmental Industry Overview & 2001 Results: EBJ's annual quantitative analysis of the environmental industry in 14 segments looks at the market from multiple prespectives: by function, by media, by customer and in growth cycles over time. Qualitative analysis in the form of free-flowing comments from nine senior executives reveals an industry gone from growth to stability, but a fairly clear picture of ehat it takes to succeed in the environmental industry. (Page 1-9)
Analytical Services: The much-affected environmental testing segment gets closer to the stability of full recovery after almost a decade of dynamic retrenchment. Leaders Pace, Sequoia, Simalabs, ALS and others discuss the current market. Segment analyst Steve Maxwell lists key trends and top labs. (Page 10-13)
Hazardous Waste: Experts assess the latest capacity adjustments in hazardous waste management, including Clean Harbors move to acquire the industrial waste division of Safety-Kleen. Profiles of Clean Harbors and regional player EQ reveal a market with opportunity for those willing to create novel client solutions. (Page 14-19)
Medical & Nuclear Waste: Stericycle remains top of the heap in a medical waste segment with considerable scope for growth. Low-level radioactive waste faces a familiar see-saw of pricing, volume and capacity adjustments. (Page 20-21)
Industry Perspective: Q&A with Stephen Andersen of Secor International shows considerable opportunity for the mid-sized firm. (Page 22-23)
Companies Featured in this Issue:
AECOM Allied Waste ALS Environmental American Council of Independent Labs American Ecology Anguil Environmental Systems ASL Group of Laboratories Browning-Ferris Industries CH2M Hill Chem-Nuclear Systems Chemical Waste Management Clean Harbors Delphi Corp. Desler S.A. Duratek Earth Tech Envirocare of Utah Environmental Financial Consulting Group Environmental Health Laboratories Environmental Information Ltd. EQ - The Environmental Quality Co. Farkas Berkowitz & Co. Heritage Environmental Services Laidlaw Environmental Services Lancaster Labs Lehman Brothers MACTEC Marine Shale Processors Med/Waste Onyx Environmental Services Pace Analytical Services Philip Services Philip Services Corp. Rhodia Eco Services Rollins Environmental Services Rust Industrial Services Safety-Kleen Sequoia Analytical Laboratory Severn Trent SIMALABS International SITA Group Stericycle Suez TechKnowledgey Strategic Group Trinity Consultants U.S. Laboratories U.S. Liquids Underwriters Laboratories USFilter Vivendi Water Wibby Environmental
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 three to five business days.
EBJ’s Environmental Industry Overview 2006: EBJ puts the industry into context, presents 2005 revenue and growth statistics for 14 segments; C&E firms share key trends. (Page 1-7)
Segment Reports: Sector profiles highlight developments in: Hazardous waste with reports on Clean Harbors, EnergySolutions and Perma-Fix (Page 8-12); Solid Waste & Recycing (Page 13-16); Waste Equipment and E-Waste (Page 16-17); and Analytical Services (Page 18-20). (Page 8-20)
Over the Horizon: Yale’s Dan Esty see a growing framework for generators to obtain eco-advantage in Green-to-Gold; a founding father of EBJ integrates skills into the investment group GreenSource; and GreenShift undertakes a four-pronged approach out of waste and in to clean technology. (Page 20-27)
EBJ Stock Reporter: A look back at the first half of 2006 reveals some surprises. (Page 28-31)
Exhibits Featured in this Issue:
Environmental Industry growth vs. GDP growth: 1971-2005
The U.S. Environmental Industry in 2004-2005 and growth by 14 Segments ($bil)
U.S. Environmental Industry: Revenues by Function: Compliance, pollution control & remediation vs Environmental infrastructure/operation & maintenance vs. Resource Productivity
The U.S. Environmental Industry 2005: Companies & Employment
2005 US Environmental Trade Balance: Exports and Imports by Segment
Hazardous Waste Management in 2005 ($mil in commercial revenues)
Top Firms in Commercial Market for Industrial Hazardous Waste Management in 2005
Structure of U.S. Solid Waste Industry: 2005
Shares of U.S. Solid Waste Industry: 2005
Waste Management Equipment: US Revenues $mil 1988-2005
Top 20 U.S. Environmental Labs in 2005
EBJ's Industry Overview 2005 (Volume XVIII, No. 7/8, 2005)
Table of Contents:
EBJ 2004 Overview: EBJ presents revenue statistics for the environmental industry’s 14 segments and C&E firms share key trends for 2005. (Page 1-3)
Business Features: Segment profiles highlight developments and opportunities in: Cultural resources (Page 4-5); Hazardous waste (Page 5-7); Reverse auctions (Page 8-9); Testing services (Page 10-13); and Resource recovery (Page 14-17). (Page 4-17)
Generator Profiles: EH&S leaders HP, Xerox, Baxter, Exelon and GM discuss management, strategy and use of contractors. (Page 18-23)
Opportunities: Homeland security market evolving as DHS gets some traction; China emerges as the world’s largest growth opportunity; and BRAC V is shaping up as the ultimate high-stakes brownfield market. (Page 24-31)
Exhibits Featured in this Issue:
U.S. Industry Growth 1998 - 2004
U.S. Environmental Industry by Segment, 2003 - 2004
Top 20 Environmental Laboratory Firms, 2004
Top 20 Labs by Productivity
U.S. Resource Recovery Revenues, 2003 - 2004
Annual Revenue Change in U.S. Resource Recovery, 1993 - 2004
Companies Featured in this Issue:
Aerotech Laboratories Inc. AMEC Earth & Environmental Baxter International Inc. Browning-Ferris International Cedar Grove Composting CERES CH2M Hill Chambers Group Inc. Clean Harbors Inc. ComED Curtis & Tompkins Ltd. Dell Computer Delta Environmental Consultants Earth Tech Ecology & Environment Inc. En Chem Environmental Microbiology Laboratory Inc. ET ENVIRONMENTAL Exelon Corp. Farkas Berkowitz & Co. General Engineering Laboratories General Environmental Management General Motors Corp. Global Environmental Management Initiative Hewlett-Packard Homeland Energy Resources Development Inc. Image Microsystems INFICON Intechra LLC Jacobs Engineering Group
Jepsen Prairie Organic JG Press Maxxam Analytics International Corp. Metal Management Inc. Mittal Group MWH Labs Norcal Waste Systems Inc. Nucor Corp. Onyx Environmental Services Parsons Corp. Parsons Infrastructure & Technology Group Inc. PECO Philip Services Corp. PSC Analytical Services Public Service Enterprise Group Inc. Ross Environmental Inc. Safety-Kleen Systems Inc. San-I-Pak Inc. SECOR International Sentex Systems Inc. Sequoia Laboratory Network Sharps Compliance Inc. Sims Group Sims Recycling Solutions SonTek Inc. Stablex Canada Inc. Stericycle Corp. STL Inc. Suez TechKNOWLEDGEy Strategic Group Teris LLC TestAmerica Environmental Services Tetra Tech Inc. Veolia Versar Inc. Waste Management Inc. Weston Solutions Inc. WorldWater & Power Corp. WTI Xerox YSI Environmental ZymaX envirotechnology
EBJ's Industry Overview 2004 (Volume XVII, No. 9/10, 2004)
Table of Contents:
Environmental Industry Overview: The $231-billion U.S. environmental industry exhibits a state of a stable maturity; observers weigh in on policy trajectories; executives of consulting & engineering firms comment on the state of the industry. (Page 1-8)
Hazardous waste firms soldier on in a difficult market; Ross, WCS and GEM take different paths in the competitive market. (Page 9-15)
Environmental testing stabilizes in revenues and top companies as sample volumes grow; Metropolitan Labs invests in internal resources; TestAmerica attracts private equity; Accutest pursues expansion; and AXYS embraces data justifiability. (Page 16-22)
USFilter increases global aspirations following its acquisition by Siemens. (Page 23)
Recycling & WME: Exports balance a flat domestic market in recyclables; equipment firms experience a turnaround and some shakeout. (Page 24-25)
Abatement contractors compete in a fragmented, regional market. (Page 26-27)
EBJ Stock Reporter: Third quarter analysis finds indices down; M&As profiled. (Page 28-31)
Companies Featured in this Issue:
3E Company Abatix Corp. Accutest Laboratories AECOM Technology Corp. Aerotech Labs American Ecology American Ecology Corp. American Water Analytica, Inc. Applied Earth Sciences Aqua America Inc. ARCADIS NV Aulson Co. AXYS Analytical Services Ltd. AXYS Group BEM Systems Chem-Nuclear Systems Clayton, Dubilier & Rice Clean Harbors Inc. Commercial Metals CST Environmental Inc. Culligan International Danaher Corp. DataChem Dell Inc. Delta Environmental Consultants Duratek Inc. Eagle Construction and Environmental Services Earth Tech Eastman Chemical Co EISC EMLab Envirocare of Utah Environmental Information Ltd. Environmental Safety Systems Environmental Technology Council EQ-The Environmental Quality Co. ERM-West Everpure Fairhill Fabricators Farkas Berkowitz & Co. Garner Environmental Services Inc. General Environmental Management Inc. General Pacific Partners LLC Geotechnical and Environmental Consultants H.I.G. Capital Hanover Square Partners Heritage Environmental Services Hewlett-Packard Hi-Rise Recycling Companies Hydrochem Hydromet Environmental Recovery Ltd. Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries InteGreyted International KANNS Kenny Industrial Services Kleen All of America Lamanco Lang Environmental League of Conservation Voters LFR Levine-Fricke Louisiana Energy Services LVI Services Inc. MARCOR Remediation Inc. McClain Industries Metropolitan Laboratories Inc. Microbac Laboratories Northern Testing Onyx Environmental Services Pace Analytical Services Paragon Analytics PDG Environmental Inc. Pentair Inc. Perma-Fix Environmental Services Philip Services Corp. Pollution Control Industries Inc. Profil PT&L Contracting QC Laboratories REP America Resource Recycling Resources for the Future RJM Waste Equipment Co. Ross Environmental Services Inc. SA&B Environmental & Chemical Consultants Safety-Kleen Corp. Sequoia Network Severn Trent Laboratories Siemens AG Stericycle Corp. SUEZ Environnement Tampa Bay Water TechKNOWLEDGEy Strategic Group TestAmerica Inc. Tetra Technology Trojan Technologies Inc U.S. Agency for International Development U.S. Liquids UMA Group Ltd. USFilter Valhi Inc. Veolia Environnement Waste Control Specialists LLC Waste Management Inc. Waste Services, Inc. Waste Technology Corp. WASTEC Wastequip Inc. White Rose Environmental Ltd
EBJ's Industry Overview 2003 (Volume XVI, No. 5/6, 2003)
Table of Contents:
Overview: EBJ presents its annual figures on the $220-billion environmental industry and lets a few executives let off steam in a challenging market. (Page 1-7)
C&E Perspective: A softening market in 2003 has experts concerned. (Page 8-9)
Hazardous Waste & Industrial Services: Haz waste markets hit a decade of doldrums; firms pursue survival in different forms, including a move to industrial services. (Page 10-14)
Environmental Testing: Labs face continued pressure in a stable market. (Page 15-19)
Instruments & Information: Global markets pace instrument growth and software providers still struggle to meet EH&S IT needs. (Page 20-22)
Air Quality Markets: Power plant needs stir the APC business and some generators invest ahead of the regs; Separation Technologies finds use for fly ash. (Page 23-25)
Process & Prevention Technology: Companies providing economic solutions with resource technology. (Page 26-27)
EBJ Stock Reporter: 2nd quarter and first half review. (Page 28-31)
Exhibits Featured in this Issue:
The U.S. Environemntal Industry as a Percent of GDP (Bar chart; 1970, 1980, 1990, 2000 and 2002)
The U.S. Environmental Industry Revenus and Growth (Data by segment; 1970, 1980, 1990, 2000, 2001 and 2002)
2002 U.S. Environmental Industry Economic Profile (Data by segment; Revenue, No. of Companies, No. of Jobs, Average Annual Growth 2003-06)
Hazardous Waste/Wastewater Shipped to Commercial Facilities (Bar chart; by facility type)
Top Laboratory Analytical and Life Sciences Instrument Makers ($mil U.S.)
Emissions Control Projects at U.S. Coal-Fired Power Plants
A Sampling of Resource Recovery and Prevention Technology Providers
Companies Featured in this Issue:
ADA Technologies Advanced Environmental Recycling Technologies AEA Technology plc Aerotech Laboratories Inc. Agilent Technologies Alcoa American Ecology Inc. American Electric Power BHA Group Holdings Inc. Brown & Caldwell Clean Environment Equipment Clean Harbors Inc. Columbia Analytical Services Inc. Corning Inc. DataChem Laboratories Inc. Dominion’s Virginia Electric Power Company Donaldson Company Donley Technology Inc. Energy Laboratories Inc. ENSR International Inc. Environmental Elements Corp. Environmental Financial Consulting Group Inc. (EFCG) Environmental Information Ltd. Environmental Support Solutions ERM ERP Environmental Services Exergy Technologies Corp. Farkas Berkowitz & Co. Fluor Corp. Fuel- N.V. General Tech Electric Gideon Informatics GZA GeoEnvironmental H.I.G. Capital of Florida Haestad Methods Hake Group Hewlett-Packard Hudson Technologies HydroChem IMCO Recycling InteGreyted Consultants Ion Track Jacobs Engineering Group K2 Industrial Services KBF Pollution Management Inc. Keltic Financial Partners L.P. Kettle Valley Dried Fruit Ltd. Kleinfelder Inc. Lexware International Matrix Service McIlvaine Co. Membrane Technology & Research Microbac Laboratories North Creek Analytical Inc. Nova Analytics Corp. Onyx Environmental Services LLC Opta Food Ingredients P&K Microbiology Services Peerless Manufacturing Co. PerkinElmer Life & Analyt. Sci. Perma-Fix Environmental Svcs Philip Services Corp. Progress Materials Inc. QED Environmental Systems Resource Recycling Rhodia Eco Services Separation Technologies Inc. Sequoia Analytical Severn-Trent Laboratories Inc. Simply Organic Ltd. SITA Southern Indiana Gas & Electric Co. Stake Technology Ltd. Stericycle Strategic Directions International TechKNOWLEDGEy Strategic Group Teledyne Technologies Inc. Tennessee Valley Authority Teris LLC The BOC Group Titan America Veridium Environmental Corp. Weiss Associates Wild West Organic Harvest Co-Operative Association Wisconsin Electric Power Co. WRS Infrastructure & Environment ZweigWhite
EBJ's Industry Overview 2002 (Volume, XIV, No. 7/8, 2002)
Table of Contents:
Environmental Industry Overview & 2001 Results: EBJ's annual quantitative analysis of the environmental industry in 14 segments looks at the market from multiple prespectives: by function, by media, by customer and in growth cycles over time. Qualitative analysis in the form of free-flowing comments from nine senior executives reveals an industry gone from growth to stability, but a fairly clear picture of ehat it takes to succeed in the environmental industry. (Page 1-9)
Analytical Services: The much-affected environmental testing segment gets closer to the stability of full recovery after almost a decade of dynamic retrenchment. Leaders Pace, Sequoia, Simalabs, ALS and others discuss the current market. Segment analyst Steve Maxwell lists key trends and top labs. (Page 10-13)
Hazardous Waste: Experts assess the latest capacity adjustments in hazardous waste management, including Clean Harbors move to acquire the industrial waste division of Safety-Kleen. Profiles of Clean Harbors and regional player EQ reveal a market with opportunity for those willing to create novel client solutions. (Page 14-19)
Medical & Nuclear Waste: Stericycle remains top of the heap in a medical waste segment with considerable scope for growth. Low-level radioactive waste faces a familiar see-saw of pricing, volume and capacity adjustments. (Page 20-21)
Industry Perspective: Q&A with Stephen Andersen of Secor International shows considerable opportunity for the mid-sized firm. (Page 22-23)
Companies Featured in this Issue:
AECOM Allied Waste ALS Environmental American Council of Independent Labs American Ecology Anguil Environmental Systems ASL Group of Laboratories Browning-Ferris Industries CH2M Hill Chem-Nuclear Systems Chemical Waste Management Clean Harbors Delphi Corp. Desler S.A. Duratek Earth Tech Envirocare of Utah Environmental Financial Consulting Group Environmental Health Laboratories Environmental Information Ltd. EQ - The Environmental Quality Co. Farkas Berkowitz & Co. Heritage Environmental Services Laidlaw Environmental Services Lancaster Labs Lehman Brothers MACTEC Marine Shale Processors Med/Waste Onyx Environmental Services Pace Analytical Services Philip Services Philip Services Corp. Rhodia Eco Services Rollins Environmental Services Rust Industrial Services Safety-Kleen Sequoia Analytical Laboratory Severn Trent SIMALABS International SITA Group Stericycle Suez TechKnowledgey Strategic Group Trinity Consultants U.S. Laboratories U.S. Liquids Underwriters Laboratories USFilter Vivendi Water Wibby Environmental
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