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Published August 2007
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This 28-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. Detailed analysis features new results from EBJ's annual survey of remediation companies on 2006 and 2007 revenue growth, market characteristics, technology applications, win rates, forecasts and more. EBJ's database of remediation companies yields a complete market model with markets divided by program area, customer type, phase of project (consulting vs, construction.), etc. Qualitative analysis includes interviews with more than 25 remediation, development and environmental consulting & engineering executives and other source. Detailed company profiles reveal that companies are taking a variety of paths - and making a variety of partnerships - to lead to success in brownfields and remediation.
The EPA-led federal hazardous waste cleanup program, which generated controversy for so many years and inspired emotions ranging form scorn to rage- and which gave birth to an industry- as faded into the background. Hazardous waste site cleanup is not dead- far from it- but as EBJ has observed before, it has been folded into more forward-looking economic concerns. There's a new lexicon for the cleanup business; "redevelopment"; "economic revitalization"; "community planning"; "BRAC"; "UXO"; "manufactured gas plants" (MGP); "vapor intrusion," etc. "Superfund" is one for the history books. In a series of sections, EBJ provides a detailed rundown of remediation sectors and the market and business challenges that contractors face both today and in the near future.
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. |
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Table of Contents
| 1 - 4 |
Remediation & 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
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| 5 - 7 |
M&A Profiles ENSR/AECOM acquires RETEC and HLA in Australia; URS brings on Washington Group to double in size
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| 7 - 9 |
The brownfields redevelopment market still relatively unscathed by flattening property markets.
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| 10 - 12 |
Insurace evolves and firms take a varied posture on risk
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| 13 - 18 |
Market Profiles Federal Markets still dominate the scene, BRAC a big one, USTs not dead and buried.
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| 18 - 23 |
Company Profiles: Technology providers Regenesis, Terratherm and VeruTEK show the industry can wave the tech flag, focused services abet LFR and Bay West.
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| 24 - 27 |
Stock Reporter: EBJ Index looks good for the first half of 2007.
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Exhibits Found in this Issue
- U.S. Environmental Industry Revenues by Major Client Categories in 2005 ($bil)
- Total Pollution Control Expenditure Breakdown by Industry: 1973-1994
- Annual Pollution Control Expenditures in All Manufacturing Industries: 1973-1994 ($mil)
- Decline of TRI Volumes and Facilities 1988-2005
- 2005 TRI Chemical Disposal/Other Releases by Industry
- Power Industry Envronmental Expenditures: 2007, by Fuel
- TRI Chemical Disposal/Releases: Leaders and Laggards, by Industry
- TRI Mercury Air Releases by Industry, 2005
- TRI Air and Water Releases of Carcinogens by Industry, 2005
- TRI Dioxin Air and Water Releases by Industry, 2005
- TRI Top 20 Facilities in 2005
- Polaroid Corp. Environmental Performance Indicators
Companies Featured in this Issue
Abatix
ADA-ES, Inc.
AECOM Technology
AIG Engineering Group
American Electric Power
ARCADIS
ASTM International
Bay West
Beacon Power
Bison Capital
Brownfield Partners
BWXT Technologies
Calgon Carbon
Cambridge Gas and Light Co.
CH@M Hill
Continental Env�l Redevelopment Financial
Duratek
EDAW Inc.
EnergySolutions
ENSR
Environmental Bankers Association
Environmental Data Resources
EPA
ERRG
Evergreen Solar
Financial Accounting Standards Board
Fluor Corp
Forest City Enterprises
Foster Wheeler
Fuel-Tech NV
FuelCell Energy
Geller DeVellis
Harvard University Graduate School of Design
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HLA-Envirosciences
Industrial Services of America
J. Ray McDermott
LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae LLP
LFR Inc.
Marsh Inc.
Marstel-Day LLC
Massachusetts Technology Development Corp
Matrix Service Co.
McDermott International
MRFI
Michael Baker Corp.
Morgan Joseph & Co.
MPM Technologies
National Brownfield Association
Neill Properties Group
Plains All American Pipeline, L.P.
Regenesis
Renova Partners
Stantec
Sullivan International Group
TerraTherm, Inc.
The Babcock & Wilcox Co.
The RETEC Group
The Shaw Group
University of Minnesota
URS Corp
VeruTEK Technologies
Washington Group International
Westcliffe Engineers, Inc.
Westrum Development Co.
XL Insurance
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