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POINTING THE WAY TO MORE EFFICIENT CHARACTERIZATION
Commercial environmental cleanup contractors put their technologies to the test during Ames Lab's recent demonstration of Expedited Site Characterization (ESC) at a private utility site. Part of the Lab's efforts to streamline waste site cleanups, these demonstrations give stakeholders a chance to experience and evaluate the ESC method and its associated technologies.


"We approach this like we do the commercialization of a product or technology," says Al Bevolo, principal investigator of Ames Lab's project to promote adoption of Expedited Site Characterization (ESC) and related innovative technologies. "Our demonstrations actively involve the people important for widespread acceptance -- in this case, regulators, site owners, commercial contractors and citizens groups. We are also widely disseminating the ESC story to those who can't attend our events."


Working to save time and money in the characterization of DOE sites, Ames Lab scientists are advancing adoption of innovative technologies along with a more efficient characterization method.

What we are doing is demonstrating, evaluating and encouraging emerging characterization technologies as we demonstrate, develop and spread the word about the new Expedited Site Characterization (ESC) method," says Al Bevolo, principal investigator of Ames Lab's ESC project. ESC is a faster, more integrated and cost-effective way to characterize a site without reducing data quality.

Ames Lab demonstrations of this method include characterization work by commercial contractors at existing contaminated sites; for example, an Iowa utility company site and DOE's St. Louis Airport Site in 1994 and DOE's Savannah River Site in South Carolina in 1995. While evaluating the ESC approach, experts also field innovative characterization technologies next to state-of-the-practice ones, seeking technologies that can characterize faster, cheaper, safer or better.

Of high priority is early involvement of regulators as well as inclusion of numerous other stakeholders, such as technology providers, state and federal officials, site owners and citizens groups. Recognizing the importance of these stakeholders in gaining acceptance for new technologies or methodologies, Ames Lab is telling them the ESC story, showing them the method with emerging technologies in action and encouraging their input.

Facilitating communication and collaboration, the ESC demonstrations include a public program of presentations, site tours, exhibits, information packets and opportunities for discussion. Information is also disseminated to a broader environmental audience, reaching those unable to attend a demonstration.


BENEFITS:


BOTTOM LINE:

Remediation of DOE sites should be quicker and less costly once a streamlined, cost-effective characterization method and faster, safer, cheaper or better technologies are in place.


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Last Modified: 28 February 2001 by dave eckels
Expedited Site Characterization: etd/technologies/projects/esc/index.html