|
ETV serves a broad group of customers, including state regulators, EPA program offices and regions, municipalities, vendors, trade organizations, and others. These customers collaborate with the ETV program to jointly fund or provide in-kind support for verification testing. Collaborative support may include such things as funding, field testing, analytical services, outreach, and testing locations. This support from collaborators, combined with their technical input, helps raise the quality and relevance of ETV information. Program personnel, verification organizations, and stakeholders work together to identify mutually beneficial collaborations. As a result, program cost-share by vendors and collaborators has increased to more than 50 percent. More importantly, ETV has been able to confirm that its collaborators have used ETV information to support technology decisions and regulatory development.
The ETV program has engaged in the following collaborations to provide high-quality performance information to technology end-users:
Key ETV Collaborations
Air Technologies |
Collaborators |
Retrofit technologies for heavy-duty diesel engines |
EPA Office of Transportation and Air Quality, Texas Commission on Environmental Quality’s New Technology Research and Development Program, Texas Environmental Research Consortium, RTI International |
Dust suppressants |
U.S. Department of Defense, RTI International |
Waste-to-energy |
States of New York and Colorado, Southern Research Institute |
Distributed generation/combined heat and power |
New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, EPA Combined Heat and Power Partnership, Southern Research Institute |
Pesticide spray drift |
EPA Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics |
Personal cascade impactor samplers |
Mickey Leland National Urban Air Toxics Research Center, Battelle |
Dioxin monitors |
Chlorine Chemistry Council, EPA Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response, EPA Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, EPA Office of Research and Development, Battelle |
Mercury emission monitors |
U.S. Department of Energy, State of Massachusetts, Illinois Clean Coal Institute, Northern Indiana Public Service Company, Battelle |
Ambient ammonia monitors |
U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Research Service, Battelle |
Hydrogen sulfide monitors |
Biomass-fired boilers |
EPA Office of Air and Radiation |
Optical/thermal imaging devices for leak detection |
EPA Region 6 |
Top of page
Water Technologies |
Collaborators |
Drinking water arsenic treatment |
States of Alaska, Pennsylvania, Michigan, New Mexico, and Utah; NSF International |
Drinking water uranium treatment |
State of New Hampshire, NSF International |
Emergency response drinking water treatment |
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation; U.S. Army Tank Automotive Research Engineering and Development Command; U.S. Naval Facilities Engineering Service Center, Naval Facilities Engineering Command; NSF International |
Storm water treatment |
States of/counties and cities in Georgia, Kentucky, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin; EPA Small Business Innovation Research Program; U.S. Geological Survey; NSF International |
Ballast water treatment, screening |
U.S. Coast Guard; U.S. Navy, Naval Research Laboratory–Key West; NSF International; Battelle |
Nutrient monitoring for industrial applications |
DuPont, Battelle |
Top of page
Soil and Hazardous Waste Technologies |
Collaborators |
Radio frequency identification tracking of hazardous wastes |
EPA Office of International Affairs, EPA Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance |
PCB detection technologies |
EPA Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response, Battelle |
Soil rapid toxicity technologies |
Top of page
Contact us for more information about these or other collaborations in the ETV program.
Organizations interested in collaborating with the ETV program should contact the appropriate ETV verification center.
See Also
Poster: ETV Collaborations (PDF) (1 p, 74 KB) September 2008
|