RemTech 2024
October 16-18, 2024
Fairmont Banff Springs
Program Now Available
80 Delegate Passes Remaining
ESAA is pleased to announce that program for 23rd edition of RemTechis now available. The program will feature 66 talks on variety of topics including:
- In-Situ
- New Technology
- Risk Management
- Groundwater
- Interesting Projects and Unique Locations
- Emerging Contaminants
- Canadian Brownfields Network
- A Little Bit of Everything
- PTAC
- Laboratory
- Natural Attenuation, Phytoremediation, Bioremediation
- Soil Sterilants Program
- Salty Talks
The complete program can be found online at: https://esaa.org/remtech/agenda/
RemTech 2024will also feature an Carnival Tailgate Party with a giant remote control car race track to start the conference, RemTech’s Best of The Castle Reception on Thursday, 52 exhibits, technical talks, networking opportunities and four amazing keynotes, featuring:
- Lyndon J. Linklater, Traditional Knowledge Keeper and Storyteller
- Timothy Caulfield, Professor Health Law and Science Policy, University of Alberta
- Bill Weir, Chief Climate Correspondent, CNN
- The Honorable Jody Wilson-Raybould, Former Member of Parliament, Former Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada, Bestselling Author
New this year we are happy to offer three Panel Discussions on Wednesday morning:
- Indigenous Panel
- Legal and Regulatory Panel
- Risk and Insurance Panel
Full conference details can be found at: https://esaa.org/remtech/
Registration: 80 delegate passes still available. Registration capped at 650 people – to register visit: https://esaa.org/remtech/register/.
Sponsorship with an Exhibit Space (1 Remaining)
Gold
$7,850 + GST | Silver
$6,650 + GST |
Sponsorships (No Exhibit Space)
- 1 delegate passe
- Half page ad in program
- Logo on website, app, event screens, program
- Corporate profile in program and app
- $3,800 + GST
Bronze
- Third page ad program
- Logo on website, app, event screens, program
- Corporate profile in program and app
- $1,900 + GST
Joe Chowaniec Scholarship – Application Deadline – August 11th
Joe Chowaniec has dedicated over 30 years to the Environmental Services Association of Alberta (ESAA). Beginning his journey as a university student, Joe advanced through every level of the association and is now retiring from his role as Executive Director.
Recognized as a visionary and leader within the environmental sector, he is esteemed by his peers. With a commitment to making a difference ‘one day at a time,’ Joe acknowledges the significant impact we possess within ourselves. He champions people, fostering achievement, and ignites a passion for excellence while celebrating their triumphs.
Beyond his professional endeavors, Joe captures the splendor of our planet through his photography.
In honor of Joe Chowaniec’s contributions, ESAA is proud to present two scholarships to students enrolled in environmental programs at Canadian universities or colleges. ESAA is offering 2 scholarships. One is for ESAA members, and their families and the second is for non ESAA members. The scholarships are valued at $2,500 for ESAA members and $1,500 for non members. This scholarships are for Full Time students registered in an Environmental Program at a recognized Canadian University, College, or Technical School.
If your company is interested in sponsoring this scholarship, contact Erin at the ESAA office to explore the available options.
The Scholarship application process is open, the winners will be announced in October at RemTech 2024. Joe has dedicated his entire career to ESAA, and this scholarship is a fitting tribute to his contributions.
For more information click here.
The ESAA photo contest has returned. Do you work for an ESAA Member company? If so, they you are eligible to enter the 2024 ESAA Photo Contest.
The theme for 2024 is ‘Canadian Landscape’. Many of us are so busy with life we don’t stop to take in the beauty we see everyday. Remind us how beautiful Canada is. Full details below. Submission deadline – August 2nd, 2024.
Prizes:
- 1st Place – $200 Local Restaurant Gift Certificate – Winners choice
- 2nd Place – $100 MEC Gift Certificate
- 3rd Place – $50 Starbucks
- The top 12 photos will be included in the second annual ESAA calendar.
Full contest details, rules, submission upload link and more can be found at: PHOTO CONTEST
Get out and get snapping!
Get Your Nomination in for the ESAA Industry Awards
The ESAA Industry Awards is an annual awards program that recognizes member excellence in the areas of environmental innovation. The program is open to all ESAA member organizations with the winners announced and awarded each year at the RemTech Symposium held in October.
2024 Category – Environmental Project of the Year
The Environmental Project of the Year Award recognizes a company’s innovation and execution of an ongoing or completed environmental project. The award will recognize a company’s project in the areas of Remediation, Reclamation, Decommissioning, Monitoring, Water, Air, Wildlife, Brownfields, etc. No matter the size and scope the project, the key metrics for judging include innovation, effectiveness, and positive environmental outcomes.
You can find all this information and how to apply online at: Industry Awards – ESAA
THE DEADLINE TO APPLY IS AUGUST 16, 2024
Any questions or concerns can be directed to ciezki@esaa.org.
We look forward to your submissions.
Alberta Energy Regulator announces $50 million increase to Closure Spend Requirement in 2025
CALGARY, AB, July 25, 2024 – The Alberta Energy Regulator’s industry-wide closure spend requirement for 2025 has been set at $750 million, a $50 million increase over last year’s requirement of $700 million. See Bulletin 2024-19 for more information.
Closure spend requirements specify the minimum amount licensees are required to spend on closure work each year.
As of June 30, 2024, the reported industry closure spend for 2023 was about $923 million, which includes the remaining funding from the Government of Alberta’s Site Rehabilitation Program. Industry-funded closure exceeded the $700 million set for 2023 by 22%. We will provide more details on 2023 closure spending, including updated industry-reported spend, in the 2023 Liability Management Performance Report for publication in late 2024.
Each year, the AER reviews and determines the industry-wide closure spend requirement, accounting for such factors as changes in inactive oil and gas infrastructure, commodity pricing fluctuations, closure work completed in the previous year, and unforeseen exceptional circumstances.
For more information, see the closure spend quotas webpage and the 2022 Liability Management Performance Report.
AER: Invitation for Feedback on Proposed Changes to Directive 071
We are seeking feedback on proposed changes to Directive 071: Emergency Preparedness and Response, Manual 026: Emergency Preparedness and Response Guide, and three new associated forms.
Directive 071 sets out the requirements for emergency preparedness and response for activities regulated under the Oil and Gas Conservation Act (OGCA), Pipeline Act, Oil Sands Conservation Act (OSCA), Coal Conservation Act (CCA), Geothermal Resource Development Act (GRDA), and Mineral Resources Development Act (MRDA) unless explicitly excluded. The directive will now apply to operations of different sizes, types, and hazards regardless of the duty holder’s energy and resource development activities or the phase of the development’s life cycle. Manual 026 provides guidance, explanation, and expectations to enable a duty holder to meet the requirements of Directive 071. The new forms will be used to establish a level of certainty in the duty holder’s emergency management program (EMP) by
- conveying management’s commitment and accountability for the EMP,
- providing industry with a means to self-assess and continually improve their EMP, and
- verifying accountability for the hazard identification and consequence analysis report by having a licensed professional sign off.
The proposed directive includes the following revisions:
- The directive’s scope has been expanded:
- Includes all activities under the OGCA, Pipeline Act, OSCA, CCA, GRDA, and MRDA and not just wells, facilities, and caverns as defined in the OGCA and pipelines defined in the Pipeline Act. Activities refer to any activity regardless of the phase of the development’s life cycle (i.e., not limited to operations).
- Includes all applicable hazards that could result in an emergency requiring public safety and environmental protection measures, not just those from hydrogen sulphide and high-vapor-pressure products.
- All duty holders within the scope of this directive are to have an EMP.
- Duty holders are to perform hazard identification and consequence analysis to identify potential emergency scenarios associated with their operations (both human and natural causes of emergencies) and to consider the potential consequences for both public and environmental receptors.
- The requirements in sections 4 and 10 (Emergency Preparedness Involving the Public and Local Authority) for emergency preparedness involving the public and appropriate authorities have been revised to promote efficiency and reflect feedback from the public, appropriate authorities, and industry.
- Spill contingency plan requirements are now in section 5 (Preparation of Emergency Response Plans), and requirements for spill response equipment training are in section 6 (Training).
- The requirements in section 7 (Exercises) have been strengthened to promote effective exercises and continual improvement.
- The assessment matrix for incident classification in appendix 4 has been revised to improve consistency in communication and response.
Manual 026 has been revised to reflect and support the proposed changes in Directive 071.
To provide feedback on the proposed revised Directive 071, Manual 026, and the forms, complete the public comment form on our website. Comments in other formats can be emailed to D071UpdateProject@aer.ca or mailed to Alberta Energy Regulator, Suite 1000, 250 – 5 Street SW, Calgary, Alberta T2P 0R4. Feedback will be accepted through November 25, 2024.
All feedback received will be reviewed and may be used in finalizing Directive 071, Manual 026, and the forms. The comments provided through this consultation will form part of the public record and may be attributed to the specific individuals who provided them. Personal information provided with comments will be collected, used, and disclosed in accordance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act. We may use the personal contact information you provide for follow-up communication related to your feedback.
The revised edition of Directive 071, Manual 026, and the forms are available on our website at www.aer.ca > Regulating Development > Rules and Directives > Directives. If you have any questions, contact our Customer Contact Centre by phone at 1-855-297-8311 or by email at inquiries@aer.ca.
Wildfires devastated Jasper. The soot and ash are putting Alberta’s glaciers at risk, scientists warn
(Source: CBC News) As the devastating fires around Jasper National Park filled the sky with smoke and ash, John Pomeroy was thinking of the region’s famous — and melting — glaciers.
Just a week before the fires, the University of Saskatchewan hydrologist had been to the Athabasca Glacier located about 100 kilometres south of the town of Jasper, to collect measurements. His team found that the glacier had already melted about three metres in thickness since last September. “Which is plenty for a mostly winter period,” he said.
What Pomeroy’s been seeing at the glacier is not the bright white, snowy landscape they’re often associated with — but rather a grimy and darkened surface. He believes it’s likely that the glacier has been further darkened by the ash and soot from the latest fires.
And the grime doesn’t just look bad. According to Pomeroy, the glacier is melting faster because darker surfaces absorb more solar radiation than a clear, white surface would.
“And the combination of that, along with the hot temperatures, puts a glacier into a death spiral.”
According to measurements collected by Pomeroy’s team, the Athabasca Glacier melted nearly nine metres last year, a record for the glacier that has been visited by millions of people and is an iconic stop on Alberta’s scenic Icefields Parkway.
Pomeroy is worried that, in addition to the summer’s soaring temperatures, all the extra soot from the recent wildfires could result in that record melt being surpassed.
“It puts these glaciers in a very perilous position yet again,” he said.
Meltwater from the thinning glacier feeds the Athabasca River, which runs more than 1,000 kilometres through Alberta and Saskatchewan. The Sunwapta River, a tributary of the Athabasca River that runs just below the glacier, has seen abnormally high flows since early July, which Pomeroy says indicates a faster than normal melt.
Researchers say melting glaciers in Western Canada could disrupt the flow of glacier-fed rivers, impacting water supply and hydroelectric power generation in the region.
Pomeroy has been studying Alberta’s glaciers for decades, and has calculated just how much wildfire smoke and ash is affecting their melt.
His team examined the Athabasca glacier from 2015 to 2020, which included particularly severe wildfire seasons in 2017 and 2018.
In a study published in 2022, Pomeroy and his team found that soot and ash from wildfires darkened the surface of the glacier, causing the ice melt to increase by up to 10 per cent.
The study also suggested the surface stayed dark beyond the fire season because algae had formed on the surface, feeding on the soot and thriving in warmer conditions — another consequence of climate change.
“So we now have algae blooms not just on Lake Erie, not just on Prairie lakes,” Pomeroy said. “We have algae blooms on our glaciers in the Rockies.”
In years where there was a lot of smoke in the sky, the study found that it prevented some solar energy from reaching the glacier, compensating for some of that increased ice melt. But the cooling impact of the smoke was limited, and the net effect of wildfires in increasing glacier melt was “substantial and long lasting,” according to the study.
And while the researchers noted heavy rain can wash away the grime, climate change is expected to make extreme fires more frequent, which means there will be fewer years where smoke and soot don’t impact the glaciers.
“What we find is that we’re getting big fire years so often … that the soot is getting refreshed almost every year,” Pomeroy said.
“It’s hard to find years now where there’s a fairly clean glacier surface to record anymore.”
Ben Pelto is a glacier scientist based in North Vancouver. His work as a consultant includes advising utilities and governments about how rapid glacier melt could endanger water resources and hydroelectric power generation.
“Yes, the glaciers are melting faster than ever, but they’re also smaller than they used to be,” he said.
“So even though they’re melting faster, it’s a smaller area that’s generating that melt,” which eventually leads to reduced flow to rivers that provide water to communities or power hydroelectric power stations.
A 2020 study by University of British Columbia researchers looked at which areas of Alberta would be most at risk from melting glaciers.
One of those locations was the Bighorn Dam, Alberta’s highest-performing hydroelectric facility and largest reservoir, which is at risk of summer water shortages because of future glacier loss.
Pelto has studied glaciers in B.C. and Alberta and has observed them darkening as well, but he pointed out that along with wildfires, the glaciers also accumulate dust and dirt from other sources, including nearby fuel emissions.
He says what concerns him is that a hotter climate means both that there’s a smaller amount of snow, and that the snow covering the glaciers is melting, leaving the icy surface exposed. Fresh, white snow reflects much more heat than just clear ice.
“So as we lose snow quicker during the year, the amount of melt that can go on is so much more because it’s reflecting less,” he said.
Parks Canada remediates 50-year-old dump in Gros Morne
(Source: CBC News) Truck load after truck load of waste is leaving a 1970s landfill site at Martin’s Point in Gros Morne National Park this week.
The remediation of the former dump is part of a federal project to clean up contaminated sites that are at risk to human health or the environment.
“For Parks Canada, our idea is to provide a pristine environment for Canadians to come and visit and look at the sites. Its really important for us. That’s was the main concern about this site,” said Vincent Lussier, senior project manager of contaminated sites.
An excavator scoops soil filled with glass bottles, clothing and car parts into the back of a dump truck that overlooks a beautiful rocky beach and coastline. Lobster fisherman check their traps under the hot sun, less than 100 meters from the remediation site.
“We have found plastic bottles, glass bottles. We found one car frame and car parts all over the place. Mostly like rubber boots, a lot of rubber boots, dolls. Basic household stuff,” said Lussier.
Just four kilometres north of Sally’s Cove, in the heart of the national park, Martin’s Point used to be a quarry site that was an easily accessible spot to dump garbage for residents living in neighbouring communities in the 70s.
This remediation project has been in the works for about five years. It started with crews investigating 700 metres along the coastline because it was unclear exactly where the landfill was located.
But, bits and pieces of debris were falling into the nearby ocean.
“We could see exposed waste along the bank, and that is why we decided to remove it,” said Lussier.
Early testing discovered lead and other metals are contaminating the soil, and erosion is allowing these materials to leach into the beach and ocean.
“There wasn’t much contamination, but we had a concern that the waste might be washed off into the ocean. In case of climate change, sea level rise, storm surge and wave climate, there is a potential issue that that waste gets into the ocean and that was our main concern,” said Lussier.
The project is part of the Federal Contaminated Sites Action Plan, which was established in 2005, with over $4 billion in funding from the federal government. Martin’s Point landfill is one of 23,663 sites in Canada listed as a federal contaminated site.
Now, all the waste is getting shipped to a proper landfill site in Hawke’s Bay — the closest landfill that will take contaminated waste.
It will take until June 15 to clean up. Tourists and travellers in the area should expect traffic slowdowns and stops while the dump trucks enter and exit the landfill site.
Researchers warn of unprecedented arsenic release from wildfires
(Source: environmentjournal.ca) tThe wildfire season of 2023 was the most destructive ever recorded in Canada and a new study suggests the impact was unprecedented. It found that four of the year’s wildfires in mine-impacted areas around Yellowknife, Northwest Territories potentially contributed up to half of the arsenic that wildfires emit globally each year.
The work, led by researchers at the University of Waterloo and Nipissing University, is the first to calculate the amount of arsenic that was stored in areas at high risk of wildfires around Yellowknife. Looking at data from the past five decades, the team estimates the 2023 wildfires potentially released between 69 and 183 tonnes of arsenic.
Arsenic, a potent toxin, which the World Health Organization associates with diabetes, cardiovascular disease, various cancers, and infant mortality, can be transformed by wildfire and released into the environment from the soils that normally sequester it.
Given that the frequency and severity of wildfires is expected to increase because of climate change, the researchers caution that in any regions in the world where annual wildfires intersect with past or present mining and smelting operations, future fires could present a major risk for releasing stored toxins back into the environment.
“Yellowknife has a decades-long history of mining, which has led to an accumulation of arsenic in the surrounding landscape. However, Yellowknife is not unique in this regard, Canada has many industrially contaminated sites that are vulnerable to wildfire,” said Dr. Owen Sutton, a postdoctoral fellow in the Faculty of Environment at Waterloo.
The amount of arsenic released by wildfires depends on a multitude of factors, such as fire temperature, depth of the burn, and soil type, and the combination of these variables.
“While our research has raised the alarm on this issue, we will be the first to argue there is an urgent need for collaborative investigation by wildfire scientists, chemists, environmental scientists and policy experts,” said Dr. Colin McCarter, professor in the Department of Geography at Nipissing University and Canada Research Chair in Climate and Environmental Change. “By integrating diverse fire management techniques, including Indigenous fire stewardship, we can hopefully mitigate these emerging risks to human and environmental health.”
The researchers found that arsenic emissions from wetlands were the most concerning because of their tendency to store contaminants compared to forests. Moving forward, they will continue quantifying the amount of toxins being stored by northern peatlands and study the potential release of other metals from those landscapes.
Dr. James Waddington, from McMaster University, also contributed to the work. Globally-significant arsenic release by wildfires in a mining-impacted boreal landscape, appears in Environmental Research Letters.
EPA orders Air Force to address PFAS water contamination at Arizona airfield
(Source: esemag.com) The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has given the U.S. Air Force and the Arizona Air National Guard 60 days to come up with a remediation plan, after groundwater samples from an airport-area facility in Tucson, Arizona, were found to be 5,300 times the allowable amount for PFAS.
While the site’s water well field is not currently delivering groundwater to the city’s water utility, the EPA said it believes the wells could be brought back into service following adequate remediation.
Tucson Water already shut down its treatment plant on the property in 2021 over PFAS concerns.
The Tucson airfield area has a history of contamination from defense and industrial activities. It is already categorized as a superfund remediation site, dating back to 1983, referred to as the Tucson Airport Remediation Project (TARP). The site is contaminated with a number of pollutants such as trichloroethylene, or TCE, formerly used as a general-purpose solvent and degreaser. Another contaminant found at the site is 1,4-dioxane.
Despite the EPA’s emergency administrative order being issued on May 29, it wasn’t until late July that the U.S. Air Force pushed back publicly on the order’s sense of urgency, and questioned its legality. U.S. Air Force officials have filed a formal request to the EPA noting that other parties have used PFAS at the airport site, and that health protection concerns lie with state and municipal authorities. They also stated that there is no imminent danger to human health to justify such a short remediation response period for the underground water contamination.
Samples taken at the airfield water treatment plant showed concentrations of PFAS as high as 53,000 parts per trillion, which is 5,300 times the allowable amount, the EPA stated.
The EPA says it issued the order pursuant to the Safe Drinking Water Act.
Tucson has taken several actions over decades to reduce contamination around the airport site and the aquifer. Notably, Tucson Water installed an Advanced Oxidation Process Water Treatment Facility adjacent to the TARP facility in 2014. The utility also installed a granular activated carbon (GAC) treatment to address residual hydrogen peroxide in the area water.
“The effect of PFAS on the TARP GAC filters has created an unanticipated and unreasonable impact to Tucson Water’s operation of the TARP to ensure drinking water quality for the residents of Tucson,” the EPA states in its order.
Remediation Technology News and Resource
(The following are selected items from the US EPA’s Tech Direct – http://clu-in.org/techdirect/)
Upcoming Live Internet Seminars
Underwater UXO a Look into SERDP and ESTCP’s Current Research – August 15, 2024, 1:00PM-4:00PM EDT (17:00-20:00 GMT). As a result of past military training and weapons testing activities, unexploded ordnance (UXO) exist on sites designated for Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) on Formerly Used Defense Sites (FUDS) and other closed ranges on active installations. Munitions ranging in size from 20-mm projectiles to 2000-pound bombs can be distributed on the surface or buried at these sites showing no visible evidence of their presence. SERDP and ESTCP successfully developed and demonstrated technologies that are now widely used to detect, classify and remediate UXO on land. This presentation will walk through several different developed technologies. For more information and to register, see https://www.clu-in.org/
PFAS Management Strategies in the United States, European Union and Australia – August 26, 2024, 10:00AM-12:00PM EDT (14:00-16:00 GMT). The purpose of this webinar is to provide information on PFAS management approaches in the US, EU, and Australia to encourage knowledge transfer and information exchange to increase the awareness of how PFAS is being managed in different parts of the world and what research is telling us about the destruction and disposal of PFAS. For more information and to register, see https://www.clu-in.org/
ITRC 1,4-Dioxane: Science, Characterization & Analysis, and Remediation Training – September 5, 2024, 1:00PM-3:15PM EST (17:00-19:15 GMT). In 2020, ITRC’s 1,4-Dioxane team created multiple tools and documents that provide information to assist all interested stakeholders in understanding this contaminant and for making informed, educated decisions. Since the 1950s, 1,4-Dioxane has seen widespread use as a solvent stabilizer. The use of solvents through the 1980s suggests its presence at thousands of solvent sites in the US; however, it is not always a standard compound in typical analytical suites for hazardous waste sites, so it previously was overlooked. The U.S. EPA has classified 1,4-Dioxane as “likely to be carcinogenic to humans.” Some states have devised health standards or regulatory guidelines for drinking water and groundwater standards; these are often sub-part per billion values. These low standards present challenges for analysis, characterization, and remediation of 1,4-Dioxane. This training is a series of six (6) modules. The six individual modules will be presented together live, and then archived on the ITRC 1,4-Dioxane training webpage for on demand listening. For more information and to register, see https://www.itrcweb.org
New Documents and Web Resources
Research Brief 355: Environmental Factors Alter PFAS Removal by Specialized Nanomaterials. Researchers funded by the NIEHS Superfund Research Program (SRP) revealed how characteristics of water treatment systems may alter the ability of novel nanomaterials to remove PFAS. Scientists should be aware of factors like water pH ‘ a measure of acidic or basic conditions ‘ or salt level to ensure that these nanomaterials effectively remove PFAS in aqueous environments, according to the team based at the State University of New York at Buffalo. For more information, please visit https://tools.niehs.nih.
Upcoming Events
ESAA Grande Prairie Mixer – September 19, 2024
ESAAs GRANDE PRAIRIE MIXER
Latitude 55
10030 102 Avenue, Grande Prairie, AB
3:30 pm – 6:30 pm
Registration:
$5 Members
$10 Non-Members
– Sponsorship Available –
ESAA will be donating 50% of Registration to Sunrise House
FOOD SPONSOR
DRINK SPONSOR
Whiskey RAFFLE SPONSOR
Bottle RAFFLE
SPONSOR
Available
ESAA Job Board
Check out the new improved ESAA Job Board. Members can post ads for free.
Current Listings:
- Senior Environmental Planner –Stantec
- Site Investigation & Remediation (SIR) Team Lead –Stantec Consulting Services Inc.
- Project Manager – Nelson Environmental Remediation – Earthworks Division
- Junior/Intermediate Project Manager – TRIUM Environmental Inc
- Bookkeeper/Business Administrator – TRIUM Environmental Inc
- Intermediate Environmental Scientist – Trace Associates Inc.
- Technical Operations – Nichols Environmental
- Reclamation Specialist – Nichols Environmental (Canada) Ltd.
- Contaminated Sites Client Lead – Environmental Material Science Inc.
- Chief Operating Officer – Claystone Waste Ltd.
- Sustainability & Environment Coordinator (Contract) – Lafarge Canada
- Environmental Coordinator – Cardinal Energy Ltd.
- Junior Data Entry Consultant – North Shore Environmental Consultants Inc.
- Senior Environmental Professional – City of Edmonton