technical sessions - Windows 7 Ultimate ISO 32 Bit 64 Bit
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technical sessions - Windows 7 Ultimate ISO 32 Bit 64 Bit
A&WMA’s 109th Annual Conference & Exhibition UNMASKING THE INDUSTRIAL RENAISSANCE Final Program June 20-23, 2016 Hyatt Regency New Orleans New Orleans, LA Welcome from the A&WMA President.....................................................................................2 Welcome from the Conference Chair and Vice-Chair ............................................................3 Conference Sponsors .............................................................................................................4 Sponsor Descriptions..............................................................................................................5 Local Host Committee ............................................................................................................7 Hyatt Regency Floor Plan .......................................................................................................8 Daily Schedule At-A-Glance..................................................................................................10 New Orleans Tours and Attractions ......................................................................................12 All About A&WMA Councils ..................................................................................................14 Technical Council and Technical Coordinating Committee Meetings ...................................15 Keynote Program ..................................................................................................................16 General Information...............................................................................................................17 Critical Review.......................................................................................................................18 Mini-Symposium ...................................................................................................................20 Professional Development Courses ......................................................................................21 Student Events ......................................................................................................................22 Young Professional(YP)/Student Events ...............................................................................23 Technical Tours......................................................................................................................24 Networking Events ................................................................................................................26 A&WMA Thanks Its Organizational Members .......................................................................27 Continuing Education............................................................................................................28 EXHIBITION Exhibit Hall Happenings ........................................................................................................30 Exhibit Hall Floor Plan ...........................................................................................................31 Exhibitors by Company Name ..............................................................................................32 Exhibitors by Booth Number.................................................................................................33 Exhibitor Descriptions ...........................................................................................................34 TECHNICAL PROGRAM Letter from the Technical Program Chair and Vice Chair ......................................................46 Technical Session Tracks by Topic Area ..............................................................................47 Technical Poster Session ......................................................................................................51 Technical Poster Diagram ....................................................................................................53 Daily Technical Session Grids ...................................................................................50, 64, 83 Technical Session Listings ........................................................................................54, 65, 84 Personal Schedule Worksheet ..............................................................................................99 A&WMA is a nonprofit, nonpartisan professional organization that enhances knowledge and expertise by providing a neutral forum for information exchange, professional development, networking opportunities, public education, and outreach to more than 5,000 environmental professionals in 65 countries. A&WMA also promotes global environmental responsibility and increases the effectiveness of organizations to make critical decisions that benefit society. Printed on Recycled Paper New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 1 Conference Information TABLE OF CONTENTS WELCOME FROM THE A&WMA PRESIDENT Welcome to the 109th Annual Conference of the Air & Waste Management Association! This is an exciting event for the A&WMA and is the best opportunity to show what we are all about as an organization. There are outstanding panel sessions, technical presentations, learning opportunities, and networking events for everyone. A huge thank you goes out to Bill Palermo, General Conference Chair, and all the members of the Local Host Committee and A&WMA Headquarters Staff. They have been working for well over a year on this event and to make certain all of the attendees have a productive and engaging experience. We also owe a thank you to our Technical Council which has been incredibly busy with coordinating sessions and presentations for all of us throughout the event. Best wishes, For those of you who are long time attendees thank you for coming one more time. For those of you who are new, we hope you see something you like and choose to return in the future. Brad Waldron A&WMA President When you see me at the event, please stop and introduce yourself and tell me how you are enjoying the conference. I am anxious to meet as many of you as possible! 2 Final Program From the General Conference Chair and Vice-Chair The Air & Waste Management Association’s (A&WMA) Annual Conference and Exhibition returns to New Orleans for the first time since 2006. It is with great pleasure that we welcome you back to the Crescent City, the tourist and convention mecca of the South. From museums to restaurants, to world-famous festivals, there is no place quite like New Orleans. Situated on a crescent-shaped bend of the Mississippi River 100 miles from its mouth, New Orleans is the largest city in Louisiana, with a population of about 350,000. Named for the Duke of Orleans, who served as Regent for Louis XV for eight years, New Orleans was founded by the French, governed for 40 years by the Spanish, and bought by the United States in the 1803 Louisiana Purchase. While you are here, we invite you to discover all the great things our city has to offer. Follow your instincts to the local shops and boutiques on Magazine Street. Follow your curiosity to the oaks and lagoons in City Park. Follow your rhythm to live music on Frenchman Street and beyond. Whether you are new to our city or here for another visit, there’s no shortage of things to discover. Not to be missed is the National World War II Museum (formerly known as the National D-Day Museum), which is the Number 1 attraction in the city. Other “must see” attractions in the city are the Aquarium of the Americas and the Audubon Zoological Gardens of the Audubon Nature Institute. New Orleans works as hard as it plays, and it is rapidly becoming one of the best places to do business in the South. Home to one of the world’s largest ports, a thriving central business district, tax incentives and a creative spirit, more companies are making their home in this area. New Orleans has a diverse economy with the main sectors being the oil and gas industry, shipbuilding, tourism, and aerospace manufacturing. Some of the largest companies in New Orleans include Ochsner Health System, Tulane University, Northrup Grumman, Entergy Corporation, Lockheed Martin, and Superior Energy Services. In 2005, Hurricane Katrina unsuccessfully attempted to deliver a knock-out punch to our city. Those who attended A&WMA’s 99th Annual Conference and Exhibition in June 2006, the first major event held in New Orleans in the aftermath of Katrina, were witness to the early stages of a monumental comeback from that near disaster. Now, 10 years later, at the 109th Annual Conference and Exhibition, you will have the opportunity to experience the renaissance that occurred in that short 10-year period. New Orleans has become one of the fastest growing cities in the nation. Our technical program and minisymposium will unmask the industrial renaissance that has taken place during this same period of time. Finally, of course, no discussion of New Orleans would be complete without mentioning food. Begin your epicurean adventure in the French Quarter with a breakfast stop at Café Du Monde for an order of beignets and a cup of steaming café au lait, an experience that dates to 1862. New Orleans' restaurants are world-renowned for quality, service, and excellence. Whether you elect to visit one of the “old-line” favorites that date back to the 1800s, one of the many newly established boutique eateries, or one of the unique neighborhood cafes or sandwich shops, you are in store for an experience that is hard to duplicate anywhere else in the world. Your Local Host Committee and A&WMA’s Louisiana Section are extremely pleased to host this year’s conference in New Orleans and excited that it will be held in the newly renovated and state-of-the-art Hyatt Regency New Orleans. We have planned a full schedule of technical presentations, professional development activities, panel discussions, technical tours, and fun activities. We are glad you are here and hope you enjoy your stay. Laissez les bon temps rouler! Bill Palermo, General Conference Chair Jennifer Tullier, General Conference Vice-Chair New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 3 Conference Information BIENVENUE À NOUVELLE-ORLÉANS! 2016 ANNUAL CONFERENCE & EXHIBITION SPONSORS A&WMA gratefully acknowledges our sponsors for their generous support of the 109th Annual Conference & Exhibition. Diamond Sponsor Platinum Sponsor Gold Sponsors Silver Sponsors Louisiana Section Bronze Sponsors West Coast Section Supporting Sponsors 4 Final Program A&WMA gratefully acknowledges our sponsors for their generous support of the 109th Annual Conference & Exhibition. Diamond Sponsor Entergy is an integrated energy company engaged primarily in electric power production and retail distribution operations. Entergy owns/operates power plants with approximately 30,000 megawatts of capacity, including nearly 10,000 megawatts of nuclear power. Entergy delivers electricity to 2.8 million customers in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas. Platinum Sponsor At 3M, we apply science in collaborative ways to improve lives daily. With $30 billion in sales, our 90,000 employees connect with customers all around the world. Learn more about 3M’s creative solutions to the world’s problems at www.3M.com or on Twitter: @3M or @3MNewsroom. Gold Sponsors The Air District is tasked with regulating stationary sources of air pollution in the nine counties that surround the San Francisco Bay: Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Napa, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, southwestern Solano, and southern Sonoma counties. The Air District aims to create a healthy breathing environment for every Bay Area resident while protecting and improving public health, air quality, and the global climate. Environmental Resources Management (ERM) is a leading global provider of environmental, health, safety, risk, social consulting services and sustainability related services. We have more than 5,000 people in over 40 countries and territories working out of more than 160 offices. ERM is committed to providing a service that is consistent, professional and of the highest quality to create value for our clients. With over 4.5 million customers and approximately 44,000 megawatts of generating capacity, Atlanta-based Southern Company is the premier energy company serving the Southeast through its subsidiaries. A leading U.S. producer of clean, safe, reliable and affordable electricity, Southern Company owns electric utilities in four states and a growing competitive generation company, as well as fiber optics and wireless communications. Southern Company brands are known for innovation, excellent customer service, high reliability and affordable prices that are below the national average. Southern Company is consistently ranked among the top utilities in Fortune's annual World's Most Admired Electric and Gas Utility rankings. Silver Sponsors As the number and stringency of air, waste and environmental regulatory requirements increases, AECOM is working with our clients to strategize and implement compliance solutions using innovative approaches and advanced technology. With 85,000 employees in 150 countries, AECOM is at the forefront— tackling issues with strategic thinking and collaboration. BMW Manufacturing employs more than 8,000 Team Members to produce all variants of the X3 and X5 Sports Activity Vehicle and the X4 and X6 Sports Activity Coupe at the Spartanburg plant. In over two decades since the plant started production in 1994, the BMW plant has produced over 3 million vehicles. By the end of 2016, BMW will have invested over $8 billion in its Spartanburg facility. With this investment, production capacity will increase to 450,000 units per year by 2016 and the plant will add a new model -- the BMW X7. Boeing is the world's largest aerospace company and leading manufacturer of commercial jetliners and defense, space and security systems. A top U.S. exporter, the company supports airlines and U.S. and allied government customers in 150 countries. Boeing products and tailored services include commercial and military aircraft, satellites, weapons, electronic and defense systems, launch systems, advanced information and communication systems, and performance-based logistics and training. Lakes Environmental is internationally recognized for its technologically advanced environmental modeling software and data products. We remain dedicated to providing industry and the regulatory community with exceptional service and cost effective environmental IT solutions. Our products increase productivity, reduce errors, and provide unique solutions in an ever-increasing regulatory constrained world. Louisiana Section The Louisiana Section of the Air and Waste Management Association is over 300 members strong located throughout the state. Meetings are held every other month and the two day Fall Conference in October is very successful. The Section is especially proud of its Young Professional group which includes several members active at the international level. We are very excited to have been selected as the host for ACE 2016 and we look forward to sharing the progress New Orleans has made in recovering from Hurricane Katrina. Laissez le bon temps rouler! New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 5 Conference Information GET TO KNOW OUR SPONSORS GET TO KNOW OUR SPONSORS A&WMA gratefully acknowledges our sponsors for their generous support of the 109th Annual Conference & Exhibition. Bronze Sponsors Arcadis is the leading global Design & Consultancy firm for natural and built assets. Applying our deep market sector insights and collective design, consultancy, engineering, project and management services we work in partnership with our clients to deliver exceptional and sustainable outcomes throughout the lifecycle of their natural and built assets. We are 27,000 people active in over 70 countries that generate $3.8 billion in revenues. We support UN-Habitat with knowledge and expertise to improve the quality of life in rapidly growing cities around the world. www.arcadis.com CB&I is the most complete energy infrastructure focused company in the world. With 125 years of experience and the expertise of approximately 54,000 employees, CB&I provides reliable solutions while maintaining a relentless focus on safety and an uncompromising standard of quality. With deep roots and more than eighty years operating on the Gulf Coast, Liskow & Lewis provides legal services and counsel to a wide range of local, regional, national and global enterprises whose operations touch virtually every facet of environmental concern -- from energy exploration, production and conveyance to waste management. With nearly 150 lawyers in New Orleans and Lafayette, Louisiana and Houston, Texas, the Liskow team provides regional and national expertise – from due diligence and regulatory compliance to permitting and environmental litigation. Headquartered in Findlay, Ohio, Marathon Petroleum Corporation (MPC), together with its subsidiaries, including Marathon Petroleum Company LP, Speedway LLC and MPLX LP, is one of the largest petroleum product refiners, marketers and transporters in the United States. MPC is the nation’s fourth-largest refiner and the largest refiner in the Midwest. MPC’s refining, marketing and transportation operations are concentrated primarily in the Midwest, Southeast, Northeast and Gulf Coast regions of the U.S. They include a seven-plant refining network, a comprehensive terminal and transportation system, and extensive wholesale and retail marketing operations. Valero, an international manufacturer and marketer of transportation fuels, petrochemical products and power, employs 10,000 people. Its assets include 15 petroleum refineries with total throughput capacity of 3.0 million barrels per day, 11 ethanol plants with a combined production capacity of 1.3 billion gallons per year, a 50-megawatt wind farm, and renewable diesel production from a joint venture. Approximately 7,500 outlets carry the Valero, Diamond Shamrock, Shamrock, and Beacon brands in the United States and the Caribbean; Ultramar in Canada; and Texaco in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Valero is a Fortune 500 company based in San Antonio. Founded in 1974, Trinity is an international EHS consulting firm specializing in air quality issues. With offices across North America, and in the U.K., China, and the Middle East, Trinity assists organizations with meeting their permitting and compliance obligations, and with broader EHS performance and risk management concerns. Trinity's T3 division provides EHS technology solutions to help organizations streamline EHS reporting and data management, and Trinity's BREEZE EHS modeling software is used by professionals worldwide. Trinity also provides training to several thousand EHS professionals annually. SafeBridge Consultants, a Trinity Consultants company, provides industrial hygiene and toxicology services to pharmaceuticals companies. West Coast Section The West Coast Section (WCS) was chartered in 1957. The Charter Members included S. Smith Griswold, Robert L. Chase, Dr. W.L. Faith and Dr. Arie Haagen-Smit. The first three all went on to become International Presidents of A&WMA/APCA. The WCS has 18 Chapters, including San Diego, Channel Islands, Mojave Desert, Orange County, Mid-Pacific, plus nine student chapters at universities. As areas throughout the western U.S. (Alaska, Nevada, Mexico, Arizona, etc.) have split off to form separate Sections, WCS has adopted international Chapters in Delhi India, Singapore, Thailand and Turkey. WCS has won the Minasian Award more times than any other Section. Supporting Sponsors CK has been serving the needs of industries that power the nation since 1981. Our actions are driven by two clear principles: working in our clients’ best interest, and investing in our staff. CK’s main office is in Baton Rouge, with regional offices in Houston, Shreveport and Lake Charles. CK offers the full range of multimedia environmental services to our clients; from site selection and permitting to operational compliance. We navigate your issues and concerns. CK has developed agency relationships through our professional and ethical credibility. The resulting process fosters harmonious relationships and helps minimize delays and unnecessary expenditures. EN-SCI manufactures several models of the ECC Ozonesonde for ozone measurement and the CFH (Cryogenic Frostpoint Hygrometer) sondes. The EN-SCI ECC Ozonesonde was developed by Dr. Walter Komhyr and has been sold for decades by EN-SCI Corporation. Both instruments are lightweight, compact, and inexpensive instruments for precise atmospheric measurement. Placid Refining Company LLC is an independent, privately held petroleum refining company located in Port Allen, Louisiana, directly across the Mississippi River from Baton Rouge. The refinery is the company's only manufacturing facility, and it produces a full range of transportation fuels, which are distributed across the southeastern United States from Louisiana to Virginia. Independent refiners such as Placid play a critical role in the nation's economy, and are an important source of transportation fuels for independent jobbers and retailers. 6 Final Program Conference Information LOCAL HOST COMMITTEE General Conference Chair William J. Palermo RTP Environmental Associates, Inc. Vice-Chair Jennifer Tullier CK Associates TECHNICAL PROGRAM Chair Sara Head Yorke Engineering, LLC Vice-Chair Karen Brignac PPM Consultants, Inc. ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGE INTERNATIONAL Chair Michael Vince Clear Skies Environmental EXHIBITION Chair Sharon Duke RTP Environmental Associates, Inc. INFORMATION/WELCOME CENTER Chair Carol Murphy RTP Environmental Associates, Inc. NEW ORLEANS TOURS Chair Raquel Murphy MONITORS & VOLUNTEERS Chair Amanda Polito Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality SPONSORSHIP Chair Jason Midgett Placid Refining Company STUDENT PROGRAM Chair Paul Algu RTP Environmental Associates, Inc. TECHNICAL TOURS/ TRANSPORTATION Chair Henry Graham Louisiana Chemical Association YOUNG PROFESSIONAL PROGRAM Chair Jessica Miller ExxonMobil New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 7 HYATT REGENCY NEW ORLEANS Level One Level Two evel Two STRAND LOADING DOCK #2 LOADING DOCK #1 GIROD STREET 10A 10B 11A 11B 12A 12B 13A 13B ELITE HALL ELITE A ELITE B 9 8 7 6 14 5 4 3 2 1 STRAND BOARDROOMS ELITE FOYER RESTROOM RESTROOM STRAND FOYER ELITE ESCALATORS R REGISTRATION E REGISTRATION ST STAIRS TO THIRD R O O M ATRIUM ELEVATORS RESTROOM ATRIUM ELEVATORS REGISTRATION & OFFICE SPACE STAIRS TO SECOND 4 5 6 RESTROOMS STAIRS TO FIRST BOLDEN 2 1 LAGNIAPPE EXCHANGE FOSTER STARBUCKS® 3 1 2 HYATT HOUSE TO Q SMOKERY & CAFÉ RESTROOM RESTROOM FEDEX OFFICE EMPIRE FOYER ARRIVAL / DEPARTURE TUNNEL D C LOBBY ELEVATORS RESTROOM LOBBY ELEVATORS THE EMPIRE BALLROOM BORGNE FRONT DESK EMPIRE FOYER LOBBY ESCALATORS B LOBBY ESCALATORS STAIRS DOWN TO FIRST FLOOR LOBBY LOBBY STAIRS UP TO EMPIRE BALLROOM BALCONY A MAIN ENTRANCE BALCONY LOYOLA AVENUE Level Three Level Four F A RESTROOMS G D E B STAIRS TO THIRD FLOOR THE CELESTIN BALLROOM 3 C H NORTH WING ELEVATORS 2 STORYVILLE HALL 1 TO NORTH WING 4 CELESTIN FOYER STAIRS TO FOURTH FLOOR 1 STAIRS TO SECOND 2 RESTROOMS WEST END BRASS ATRIUM ELEVATORS 3 4 5B FREIGHT ELEVATOR ELITE ESCALATORS IMPERIAL DISPLAY KITCHEN 8 BLOCK KITCHEN & BAR IMPERIAL BOARDROOMS 5C 6 VITASCOPE HALL 5D 7 SEMI PRIVATE DINING 8 9 LOBBY ESCALATORS 10 RESTROOMS LOBBY ELEVATORS 11 8 Final Program RELIANCE 1-5 5 RELIANCE BOARDROOM 5A ST E D W N SS E A BR PRIVATE DINING ATRIUM ELEVATORS 12 1718 DESIGN CENTER DAILY SCHEDULE AT-A-GLANCE TIME EVENT LEVEL MEETING ROOM 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM Annual Conference Registration 1 Elite Foyer 10:00 AM – 5:00 PM Board of Directors Meeting 4 Imperial 5CD 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM Professional Development Courses Refer to the Final Program Addendum for up-to-date course listings and rooms SUNDAY, JUNE 19 MONDAY, JUNE 20 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM Annual Conference Registration 1 Elite Foyer 7:00 AM – 7:45 AM Joint Councils’ Cont’l Breakfast 3 Storyville Hall 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM Professional Development Courses Refer to the Final Program Addendum for up-to-date course listings and rooms 8:00 AM – 2:45 PM Young Professionals Advisory Council 4 Imperial 12 8:00 AM – 2:45 PM Technical Council Meeting 4 Imperial 5AB 8:00 AM – 2:45 PM Section & Chapters Council Meeting 4 Imperial 5CD 8:00 AM – 2:45 PM Education Council Meeting 4 Imperial 9 9:00 AM – 1:00 PM Exhibitor Appreciation Break 1 Elite Hall 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM Joint Councils’ Lunch 3 Storyville Hall 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM Technical Poster Setup 3 Storyville Hall 1:00 PM - 5:30 PM Federal Facilities Air Quality Roundtable Meeting 2 Strand 7 2:50 PM – 5:00 PM Keynote Presentation 2 Empire Ballroom BCD 5:00 PM – 7:00 PM Exhibition Grand Opening Networking Reception 1 Elite Hall 7:00 PM – 8:00 PM EPA Alumni Reception 4 Imperial 11 7:00 AM – 5:30 PM Annual Conference Registration 1 Elite Foyer 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM Technical Program Resource Center 2 Strand 3 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM 7:15 AM – 7:30 AM 12:15 PM – 12:30 PM Monitors Room AM CHECK-IN PM CHECK-IN 2 Strand 4 7:30 AM – 8:30 AM East Central Section Breakfast 4 Imperial 11 8:00 AM – 9:00 AM International Affairs Committee Meeting 2 Bolden 4 8:00 AM – 9:00 AM AAEES / AEESP / A&WMA Meet & Greet 4 Imperial 5ABC 8:00 AM – 10:00 AM Technical Poster Setup 3 Storyville Hall 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM Occidental Chemical Corporation (OxyChem) Technical Tour Off Site Bus Pickup is located through the exit of the tunnel area in the Hyatt Lobby; right of the front desk. 9:00 AM – 10:00 AM Session Break / Exhibition 1 Elite Hall 9:00 AM – 11:00 AM Membership Committee Meeting 4 Imperial 5D 9:00 AM – 11:45 AM Critical Review 2 Empire Ballroom BCD 9:00 AM – 5:30 PM Exhibition Hours 1 Elite Hall 10:00 AM – 11:45 AM Technical Poster Session 3 Storyville Hall 10:00 AM – 11:45 AM Technical Poster Presentation Room 3 Storyville Hall 11:30 AM – 1:30 PM Past Presidents’ Lunch 2 Strand 7 11:30 AM – 12:00 PM Student Welcome Reception 3 Storyville Hall TUESDAY, JUNE 21 10 Final Program TIME EVENT LEVEL MEETING ROOM 11:45 AM – 1:15 PM Technical Coordinating Committee Meetings 2 Tech Session Rooms (see page 15) 12:00 PM – 12:30 PM Student Chapter Exchange 3 Storyville Hall 12:30 PM – 1:30 PM Academia 101: How to Apply For and Get a Faculty Position 3 Storyville Hall 1:20 PM – 3:00 PM Technical Sessions Mini Symposium: Industrial Growth and Environmental Stewardship 2 Tech Session Rooms 2:00 PM – 2:30 PM Student / ECi Poster Set Up 3 Storyville Hall 2:30 PM – 5:30 PM Student / ECi Poster Judging 3 Storyville Hall 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM Session Break / Exhibition 1 Elite Hall 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM Scholarship Trustees 2 Strand 5 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM Critical Review Committee 4 Imperial 5D 4:00 PM – 6:00 PM Technical Sessions Mini Symposium: Industrial Growth and Environmental Stewardship 2 Tech Session Rooms 5:00 PM – 6:00 PM Scouting Jamboree Committee 4 Imperial 9 5:45 PM – 6:30 PM A&WMA Annual Business Meeting 4 Imperial 5ABC 6:30 PM – 8:00 PM Grand Reception 2 Empire Ballroom A 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM Annual Conference Registration 1 Elite Foyer 7:00 AM – 6:30 PM Technical Program Resource Center 2 Strand 3 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM 7:15 AM – 7:30 AM 12:15 PM – 12:30 PM Monitors Room AM CHECK-IN PM CHECK-IN 2 Strand 4 8:00 AM – 9:00 AM Young Professionals’ Mentor Breakfast 4 Imperial 5ABC 8:00 AM – 9:40 AM Technical Sessions Mini Symposium: Industrial Growth and Environmental Stewardship 2 Tech Session Rooms 8:30 AM – 9:30 AM Exhibitors Meeting 1 Elite Hall 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM Cornerstone Chemical Company Technical Tour Off Site Bus Pickup is located through the exit of the tunnel area in the Hyatt Lobby; right of the front desk. 9:30 AM – 11:00 AM Speed Networking 4 Imperial 9 9:30 AM – 4:00 PM Exhibition Hours 1 Elite Hall 9:40 AM – 10:20 AM Session Break / Exhibition 1 Elite Hall 10:20 AM – 12:00 PM Technical Sessions Mini Symposium: Industrial Growth and Environmental Stewardship 2 Tech Session Rooms 10:30 AM – 11:30 AM Joint Meeting of the Publications Committee, Editorial Advisory Committee, and Editorial Review Board 2 Bolden 4 11:30 AM – 2:00 PM Editorial Review Board 2 Bolden 4 12:00 PM – 1:30 PM Executive Forum Luncheon 4 Imperial 5ABC 12:05 PM – 1:35 PM Technical Coordinating Committee Meetings 2 Tech Session Rooms (see page 15) 1:30 PM – 3:30 PM ECi Presentations 3 Storyville Hall 1:40 PM – 3:20 PM Technical Sessions Mini Symposium: Industrial Growth and Environmental Stewardship 2 Tech Session Rooms 2:00 PM – 4:00 PM EM Editorial Advisory Committee 2 Bolden 4 2:00 PM – 3:00 PM Honors & Awards Rehearsal 2 Empire Ballroom BCD 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM Session Break/Exhibitor Happy Hour 1 Elite Hall 4:00 PM – 6:00 PM Technical Sessions Mini Symposium: Industrial Growth and Environmental Stewardship 2 Tech Session Rooms TUESDAY, JUNE 21 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22 New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 11 Conference Information DAILY SCHEDULE AT-A-GLANCE DAILY SCHEDULE AT-A-GLANCE TIME EVENT LEVEL MEETING ROOM Publications Committee 2 Bolden 4 4:00 PM Exhibits Teardown 1 Elite Hall 5:00 PM – 6:00 PM Student Awards Ceremony & Reception 3 Storyville Hall 6:00 PM – 7:00 PM Councils’ Reception 4 Imperial 5ABC 7:00 PM – 9:30 PM Student/YP Networking Reception Off Site Walk-On's Bistreaux & Bar 7:30 AM – 5:00 PM Annual Conference Registration 1 Elite Foyer 7:30 AM – 5:00 PM Technical Program Resource Center 2 Strand 3 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM 7:15 AM – 7:30 AM 12:15 PM – 12:30 PM Monitors Room AM CHECK-IN PM CHECK-IN 2 Strand 4 8:00 AM – 9:40 AM Technical Sessions Mini Symposium: Industrial Growth and Environmental Stewardship 2 Tech Session Rooms 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM Sewerage & Water Board of New Orleans, Louisiana: Inside the East Bank Wastewater Treatment Plant Technical Tour Off Site Bus Pickup is located through the exit of the tunnel area in the Hyatt Lobby; right of the front desk. 9:40 AM – 10:00 AM Session Break 2 Tech Session Foyer 10:00 AM – 11:40 AM Technical Sessions Mini Symposium: Industrial Growth and Environmental Stewardship 2 Tech Session Rooms 11:50 AM – 1:20 PM Honors & Awards Luncheon and Ceremony 2 Empire Hall BCD 12:00 PM Technical Posters Tear Down ends at 12:00 PM 3 Storyville Hall 1:30 PM – 3:10 PM Technical Sessions Mini Symposium: Industrial Growth and Environmental Stewardship 2 Tech Session Rooms 3:10 PM – 3:30 PM Session Break 2 Tech Session Foyer 3:30 PM – 4:50 PM Technical Sessions Mini Symposium: Industrial Growth and Environmental Stewardship 2 Tech Session Rooms 4:00 PM – 4:50 PM Non-ACE Programming Task Force 2 Strand 12A 4:50 PM – 6:00 PM 2017 ACE Planning & Technical Council Wrap-Up Meeting 2 Strand 12A WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22 4:00 PM – 5:00 PM THURSDAY, JUNE 23 New Orleans Tours and Attractions New Orleans is a vibrant city offering an abundance of tours and attractions. Please visit the conference website at http://ace2016.awma.org/visit-neworleans-2 to explore what the city has to offer. Information will also be available at the Local Host Booth in the Registration area. Any available tour can be booked through the Concierge at the Hyatt Regency New Orleans. Advance tour reservations are not necessary, as all of the tours are offered on a daily basis. Tours may be booked a short time prior to arrival by calling the Concierge at the Hyatt Regency at 504-561-1234. 12 Final Program ALL ABOUT A&WMA COUNCILS AND TECHNICAL COUNCIL DIVISION & TCC MEETINGS At A&WMA we depend on our volunteers to provide the foundation and expertise that sets us apart from other environmental associations. In order to continue to offer conferences, programs and webinars that cover the latest topics, we rely on our members to take an active role in the Association by: • Sitting on the Board or becoming a Section or Chapter Officer • Writing and presenting a paper at the Annual Conference & Exhibition or at a section or chapter event • Contributing to a specialty conference • Developing a Webinar or participating as a panelist • Teaching a professional development course • Submitting a technical paper for the Journal or an article for EM • Participating in a council or committee Education Council Monday, June 20, 8:00 am-2:45 pm Hyatt Regency, Room: Imperial 9, Level 4 The Education Council provides input into the development of products and services offered to A&WMA members such as professional development educational needs. The Education Council is made up of three divisions: Professional Development, Higher Education and Public Education. Professional Development is responsible for continuing education programs and services related to electronic learning. Higher Education is responsible for university education, student development, and student membership. Public Education is responsible for developing programs on environmental issues for the members to become more actively involved in environmental education efforts. Technical Council Volunteers can serve on each of our four councils: Education, Sections & Chapters, Young Professionals Advisory, and Technical. Attend a council meeting on-site at the Annual Conference to learn more! Everyone is welcome. Sections & Chapters Council Monday, June 20, 8:00 am-2:45 pm Hyatt Regency, Room: Imperial 5CD, Level 4 The Sections and Chapters Council enables, encourages, and ensures strong sections and chapters to fulfill the core purpose of the Association at the local level while communicating closely with Association leadership. It is comprised of a Chair, Vice Chair, two Committee Chairs, several advisors, and one representative from each Section and Chapter of the A&WMA. Young Professionals Advisory Council Monday, June 20, 8:00 am-2:45 pm Hyatt Regency, Room: Imperial 12, Level 4 The Young Professional Advisory Council advises the A&WMA Board and other Councils on what services and activities effectively engage young professionals (YPs). This Council provides is great opportunity for younger members to develop their leadership skills and become more involved in the Association. This Council also facilitates the integration of student members into the Association upon graduation. 14 Final Program Monday, June 20, 8:00 am-2:45 pm Hyatt Regency, Room: Imperial 5AB, Level 4 The Technical Council provides the technical expertise to determine and produce the technical programs at annual meetings and specialty conferences; peer-review articles and publications; and work with the other Councils to develop programming and webinars. The Council is divided into four groups: Air Group; Environmental Management Group; Sustainability, Climate Change, Resource Conservation and Waste Management Group; and Industrial, Government, and Public Sectors Group. These groups are comprised of 10 divisions; the divisions are further divided into technical coordinating committees (TCCs). Stop by the Technical Program Resource Center at the Hyatt Regency Hotel (HR) in Room Strand 3 (located on Level 2 of the hotel) to learn more about opportunities to participate. In addition to the council meeting on Monday, the following meetings are planned for Technical Council: • Non-ACE Programming (PRG) Task Force, Thursday, June 23 4:00-4:50 pm, Strand 12A (Level 2) • ACE2017 Planning Meeting, Thursday, June 23, 4:50pm – 6:00pm, Room: Strand 12A (Level 2) • See the following page for TCC Meetings Divisions Division Names TCCs AA Measurements, Monitoring, and Controls Division AAM, AAE, AAC AP Atmospheric Processes Division APP, APC, APM, APV EE Effects & Exposure Division HEE, RAM, ODR EP Program Administration Division REG, EPE, PUB ET Transportation Division OMS, PLU, CNV SR Sustainability and Resource Conservation Division SUS, SRC CC Climate Change Impacts, Mitigation and Adaption Division CCP, CCI WM Waste Management/Processing, Waste-to-Energy and Bioenergy Division WMB, WMR IP Industrial Processes and Sectors Division CHE, IFB, MIN GP Government Facilities and Public Sectors Division FED, IEA, PWR ITF Inter-Committee Task Forces NAN, PRG GET INVOLVED! To become involved in one or more of the TCCs, attend any of the committee meetings in New Orleans or contact the appropriate Division or TCC Chair, or visit the Technical Council Resource Center in Room Strand 3 if interested. All A&WMA members are welcome to attend. Division and TCC Meetings are scheduled as shown below: Date and Time Tuesday, June 21, 2016 11:45am-1:15pm Division and/or TCC Room Number* APP-Particulate Matter S-11B REG-Regulations, Legal Issues & Permitting, PUB-Public Participation, S-10A/B HEE-Health Effects and Exposures, S-13A CHE-Chemical Petroleum, IFB-Industrial Furnaces & Boilers, S-12B*, EPE-Economics, Partnership & Environmental Leadership RAM-Risk Assessment & EHS Management MIN-Mineral Extraction & Processing FED-Federal Facilities, IEA-Indigenous Environmental Affairs, Wednesday, June 22, 2016 12:05pm-1:35pm PWR-Power Generation & Renewable Energy AAC-Control Technologies, S-12A S-12B*, B-1, B-2, B-6 S-10A/B*, AAM-Measurement Techniques & Instrumentation, S-12B APC-Atmospheric Chemistry B-5 AAE-Measurements, Monitoring, Emission Inventory & Applications APV-Visibility & Radiative Transfer APM-Atmospheric Modeling & Meteorology B-1 S-11B CCI-Climate Change Impacts & Adaptation, S-11A CNV-Community Noise & Vibration, OMS-On & Off Road Mobile Sources, B-2 NAN-Nanoparticles Inter-Committee Task Force S-13B CCP-Climate Change Policy, Strategy & Regulations PLU-Transportation Policies & Land Use ODR-Odors S-13A SRC-Resource Conservation, SUS-Sustainability WMB-Waste Resource Recovery, Processing & Bioenergy, S-12A B-6 WMR-Waste Characterization & Site Remediation * All Rooms located in the Hyatt Regency Hotel, S=Strand and B=Bolden. First room listed is for initial Group or Division Meeting, with additional rooms listed available for TCC breakout meetings where requested. New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 15 Conference Information The Technical Council Divisions and Technical Coordinating Committees (TCCs) are as follows: KEYNOTE PROGRAM Monday, June 20 • 2:50 pm – 5:00 pm • Empire Ballroom BCD • Sponsored by 3M The Future of EPA A. Stanley Meiburg, Acting Deputy Administrator, United States Environmental Protection Agency Stan Meiburg serves as the Acting Deputy Administrator of EPA, continuing a career spanning over 36 years at EPA in locations around the country. He has broad experience in the management of the agency across the spectrum of EPA’s activities, and has received numerous awards, including recognition as a Distinguished Federal Executive in 2012 and as a Meritorious Federal Executive in 1997. He received EPA’s Gold Medal in 1990 for his work on the Clean Air Act Amendments, and Silver Medal in 1983 for work on state-federal relations. Meiburg spent 18 years as Deputy Regional Administrator of EPA's Region 4 office in Atlanta, Georgia, following service as Deputy Regional Administrator in EPA’s Region 6 office in Dallas, Texas. He is the second person in EPA history to serve as Deputy Regional Administrator in more than one region. From 1990 to 1995, Meiburg was Director of Region 6's Air, Pesticides and Toxics Division. From 1985 to 1990, he was Director of the Planning and Management Staff of EPA’s Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards in Durham, North Carolina, leading work on the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments as well as planning and budgeting for the air program. Meiburg joined EPA in 1977, serving in a variety of positions in Washington, D.C., Research Triangle Park, N.C., and Dallas, Texas, before coming to Atlanta. Meiburg holds a B.A. degree from Wake Forest University and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in political science from The Johns Hopkins University. Keynote Session Panel Kim Greene, Chief Operating Officer, Southern Company Kim Greene is chief operating officer of Southern Company, responsible for overseeing the Southern Company system’s operations, including generation, transmission, engineering and construction services, system planning, and research and environmental affairs, as well as Southern Power and Southern Wholesale Energy. Prior to becoming COO in 2014, Greene served as president and CEO of Southern Company Services. From 2007 to 2013, Greene held senior executive roles at Tennessee Valley Authority, serving as chief financial officer and chief risk officer for the federally-owned corporation. Earlier, Greene also spent eight years at Southern Company subsidiary Southern Energy Inc., now NRG. Vickie Patton, General Counsel, Environmental Defense Fund Vickie Patton serves as Environmental Defense Fund’s General Counsel and manages the organization's national and regional clean air programs. For over two decades, she has worked to protect human health and the environment from air pollution. She has been involved in numerous rulemakings under the Clean Air Act and associated cases (including several Chuck D. Barlow, Vice President, Environmental Strategy and Policy, Entergy Corporation Chuck D. Barlow is Vice-President, Environmental Strategy and Policy of Entergy Corporation. Barlow supports the Entergy national fleet from offices in Jackson, Mississippi and New Orleans. Previously, he worked as General Counsel of the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality from 1996 to 2003. Barlow holds the Master of Laws (LL.M.) in environmental and natural resource law from the Northwestern School of Law of Lewis & Clark College, Portland, Oregon, where 16 Final Program Greene serves on the board of directors for the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI). In addition, she serves on the University of Tennessee College of Engineering board of advisors and as a member of the advisory board for the University of Alabama at Birmingham master of advanced safety engineering and management program. Greene is a member of the Alabama Engineering Hall of Fame and a recipient of the University of Tennessee’s Distinguished Alumna Award. She was named to Diversity Journal’s “Women Worth Watching” Class of 2015, World Gen’s Class of 2015, and was named 2015 POWER-GEN Woman of the Year. Greene earned a bachelor’s degree in engineering science and mechanics from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. She holds a master’s degree in biomedical engineering from the University of Alabama at Birmingham and a master’s degree in business administration from Samford University. In 2011, Greene completed the Advanced Management Program at Harvard Business School. successful cases before the U.S. Supreme Court), testified before congressional and state legislative committees, and authored a variety of articles on air quality protection and environmental policy. Prior to joining Environmental Defense Fund, she worked in the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Office of General Counsel in Washington, D.C., where she provided legal counsel on national air quality initiatives. She has received a number of awards for her work and in 2011 received the Air & Waste Management Association's Richard Beatty Mellon Environmental Stewardship Award. he graduated magna cum laude in 1995. In 2007, he was honored with Lewis and Clark’s Distinguished Environmental Graduate Award. Barlow received his undergraduate degree from Mississippi College in 1984, the Master of Arts in English from the University of Virginia in 1986, and his law degree from the Mississippi College School of Law in 1989 (magna cum laude). In 1989-90, he clerked for Chief Judge Charles Clark of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Barlow served two terms as a member of the United States Environmental Protection Agency’s National Environmental Justice Advisory Council and as a member of the governing Council of the American Bar Association’s Section on Environment, Energy, and Resources. In 2014, the Mississippi Business Journal named him one of the State’s top ten leading attorneys. Registration Hours Hyatt Regency (Elite Foyer -1st floor) Sunday, June 19: 7:00 am – 5:00 pm Monday, June 20: 7:00 am – 5:00 pm Tuesday, June 21: 7:00 am – 5:30 pm Wednesday, June 22: 7:00 am – 5:00 pm Thursday, June 23: 7:30 am – 5:00 pm Exhibition Hours Hyatt Regency (Elite Hall – 1st floor) Monday, June 20: 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm Tuesday, June 21: 9:00 am – 5:30 pm Wednesday, June 22: 9:30 am – 4:00 pm Monitor Room: Hyatt Regency (Strand 4 - 2nd floor) For those of you that have been assigned to monitor a technical session, on the day of your assignment, (Tuesday - Thursday), please obtain your Monitor’s badge from Registration and report to the Monitor Room (Strand 4 2nd floor) to check-in and to receive your materials. Important: If you are monitoring a morning session, please check-in at the Monitors’ Room at 7:15 a.m. If you are monitoring an afternoon session, please check-in at the Monitors’ Room at 12:15 p.m. A&WMA Booth/Bookstore The A&WMA Booth and Bookstore will belocated beside the registration area in the Hyatt Regency Elite Foyer on the 1st floor and be open during the following hours: Monday, June 20: 2:00 pm – 5:00 pm Tuesday, June 21: 8:00 am – 5:00 pm Wednesday, June 22: 8:00 am – 5:00 pm New Orleans Local Host Booth: Hyatt Regency (Elite Foyer -1st floor) Monday, June 20: 1:00 pm - 5:00 pm Tuesday, June 21: 8:00 am – 5:00 pm Wednesday, June 22: 8:00 am – 5:00 pm Thursday, June 23: 8:00 am – 3:00 pm Technical Program – How Can We Make It Better? How do I find experts in my field to talk to one-on-one? How can I learn about innovative techniques months before the Annual Conference? How can I help plan a great technical session for next year’s Annual Conference and other A&WMA Events? Stop by the Technical Program Resource Center to learn more from the Technical Council leaders and find out how you can participate in developing the Technical Program. All volunteers are welcome. Technical Program Resource Center: Hyatt Regency (Strand 3 - 2nd floor) Do you have a session that you want to propose for next year’s annual conference? Come by the Technical Program Resource Center to share your ideas for the 2017 Technical Program. New ideas for the 2017 Annual Conference will be accepted until 12:00 pm (noon) on Thursday, June 23rd. The Technical Program Resource Center is available for authors to preview their presentations and for session chairs to print out presenter bios. Tuesday, June 21: 7:00 am – 5:00 pm Wednesday, June 22: 7:00 am – 6:30 pm Thursday, June 23: 7:30 am – 5:00 pm Guests of ACE Attendees If you’re in town as a guest of an ACE attendee, there’s plenty to do in New Orleans while the conference is going on. Stop by the Local Host Booth near the Registration area in the Hyatt Regency Elite Foyer to find information on New Orleans tours and attractions. Grab and Go Grab a sandwich, salad, or snack during lunch while you’re on the go: Addendum, 3rd level Tuesday, June 21: 10:30 am - 2:00 pm Wednesday, June 22: 10:30 am - 2:00 pm Session Breaks: Hyatt Regency Tuesday, June 21 (Elite Hall, 1st Level) 9:00 am – 10:00 am 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm Wednesday, June 22 (Elite Hall, 1st Level) 9:40 am – 10:20 am 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm (Exhibitor Happy Hour) Thursday, June 23 (Tech Session Lobby, 2nd level) 9:40 am – 10:00 am 3:10 pm – 3:30 pm New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 17 Conference Information GENERAL INFORMATION 46TH ANNUAL CRITICAL REVIEW Sponsored by AECOM Emissions from Oil and Gas Operations in the United States and Their Air Quality Implications economic benefits, the environmental impacts associated with ‘‘fracking’’ for oil and gas have made it controversial. By David T. Allen, Ph.D. Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Texas at Austin The production and utilization of oil and gas from shale resources has multiple environmental impacts, including impacts on land, water, and air. The 46th Annual A&WMA Critical Review will focus on the air quality implications of the production and use of oil and gas from shale formations. Three types of air pollutants will be considered: greenhouse gases, air toxics, and photochemical air pollutants and their precursors. The Review will examine the changes in the magnitude and spatial distribution of emissions from oil and gas production activities, as well as changes in the magnitude and spatial distribution of emissions from sectors that are the largest users of the shale oil and gas. For users of shale oil and gas, the primary focus will be on large industrial sectors that are being transformed most dramatically, specifically electricity generation and chemical manufacturing. Tuesday, June 21 • 9:00 am – 11:45 am Empire Ballroom BCD The energy supply infrastructure in the United States has been changing dramatically over the past decade. Increased production of oil and natural gas, particularly from shale resources using horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, made the United States the world’s largest producer of oil in 2014. The U.S. Energy Information Administration has projected that increased domestic production of oil and gas will persist for decades and that the United States may become a net energy exporter over the next two decades. While the availability of abundant, lower cost, and domestically sourced oil and natural gas has had significant As emissions from oil and gas production and use have been changing, so have the tools available for measuring emissions. New, highly sensitive, high time resolution instruments have been developed and deployed in the past several years, providing new insights into the emissions from oil and gas production, processing and transmission, and use. Findings from these studies will be reviewed, and new insights will be described. One significant finding is that many source categories in oil and gas production, processing and transmission include “super-emitters”. This phenomenon, and the challenges it presents, are analogous to the well-known problem of estimating and controlling emissions from motor vehicles. It has been well known for decades that roughly 10% of the vehicle fleet contributes roughly 50% of on-road emissions; emissions from some parts of the oil and gas sector also have these types of high emitting sources, with significant implications for the design of emission control strategies. Another significant finding is the intermittency of many large sources in the oil and gas sector. Again, the phenomenon will be described along with implications for control strategies. Finally, regional air quality implications of some of the changes in emission magnitudes and spatial distribution will be described. A particular focus will be on photochemical air pollutants, especially ozone. 18 Final Program Dr. David Allen is the Gertz Regents Professor of Chemical Engineering and the Director of the Center for Energy and Environmental Resources at the University of Texas at Austin. He is the author of seven books and over 200 papers, primarily in the areas of urban air quality, the engineering of sustainable systems, and the development of materials for environmental and engineering education. Dr. Allen has been a lead investigator for multiple air quality measurement studies, which have had a substantial impact on the direction of air quality policies. He has developed environmental educational materials for engineering curricula and for the University’s core curriculum, as well as engineering education materials for high school students. The quality of his work has been recognized with awards from the Invited Discussants Following the presentation, a panel of invited experts will critique the presentation and the author’s conclusions, and will offer their views on the topic. This year’s invited discussants are: • Gary R. Mueller, Principal Consultant Air Quality, Shell Projects and Technology; ● Ramón Alvarez, Lead Senior Scientist, U.S. Climate and Energy Program, Environmental Defense Fund; ● Anthony J. Marchese, Associate Dean and Professor of Engineering, Colorado State University; and ● Eric Stevenson, Director of Meteorology, Measurement, and Rules, Bay Area Air Quality Management District. Join the Discussion Comments also will be solicited from the floor and from written submissions to the Critical Review Committee Chair. The Chair will then synthesize these points into a Discussion Paper that will be published in the November 2016 issue of Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association (JA&WMA). Comments should be submitted in writing to Dr. Michael T. Kleinman, Critical Review Committee Chair, at [email protected] by no later than National Science Foundation, the AT&T Foundation, the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, the Association of Environmental Engineering and Science Professors, and the State of Texas. He has served on a variety of governmental advisory panels and from 2012 to 2015 chaired the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Science Advisory Board. He has won teaching awards at the University of Texas and the University of California, Los Angeles, and the Lewis Award in Chemical Engineering Education from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. Dr. Allen received his B.S. degree in Chemical Engineering, with distinction, from Cornell University in 1979. His M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Chemical Engineering were awarded by the California Institute of Technology in 1981 and 1983, respectively. He has held visiting faculty appointments at the California Institute of Technology, the University of California, Santa Barbara, and the U.S. Department of Energy. July 31, 2016. The full-length review will be published in the June 2016 issue of JA&WMA. Get Involved Get involved with the Critical Review Committee and help further our scientific understand by attending the Annual Meeting of the Critical Review Committee on Tuesday, June 21, 2016, at 3:00–4:00 p.m. Room: Imperial 5C, Level 4, Hyatt Regency New Orleans. 2016 Critical Review Committee Michael T. Kleinman, Chair Sam L. Altshuler, Vice Chair A. Gwen Eklund, Immediate Past Chair (2013–2014) George Hidy, Past Chair (2009–2012) Judith Chow, Past Chair (2001–2008) John Watson, Past Chair (1994–2000) John D. Bachmann Patricia A. Brush, Technical Council Liaison Prakash Doraiswamy Naresh Kumar Eric Stevenson Abhilash Vijayan New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 19 Conference Information 46TH ANNUAL CRITICAL REVIEW MINI-SYMPOSIUM Industrial Growth and Environmental Stewardship This year’s mini-symposium will be focused on industrial growth and environmental stewardship. It will consist of a single track of sequential paper and panel sessions addressing issues facing industry on maintaining environmental progress while accommodating industrial growth, in line with the Annual Conference theme. Sessions on current EPA priorities, new source review updates, various permitting case studies for permitting in ozone non- 20 Final Program attainment areas, permitting problems and solutions, and innovative permitting approaches, as well as panels on risk management plans and trends in citizen air quality measurements will be included. For more mini-symposium information: Karen Brignac at [email protected] John Koehler at [email protected] Sunday, June 19 • Half Day Courses Monday, June 20 • Half Day Courses EMGM-130: Introduction to Environmental Forensics 8:00 am-12:00pm Instructors: Laurie Benton, Managing Scientist, Exponent Brenton Cox, Senior Engineer, Exponent AIR-186: Introduction to Open-Path Monitoring for Fenceline Monitoring and Flux Measurement 8:00am-12:00pm Instructors: Curtis Laush, Ph.D., Director, Austin Physical Chemical Laboratory, Geosyntec Consultants, Inc. Steve Ramsey, PE, BCEE, Principal Engineer, Geosyntec Consultants, Inc. AIR -135: Fundamentals of Air Pollution Meteorology and Dispersion Modeling 1:00pm-5:00pm Instructor: Anthony J. Sadar, CCM Air Pollution Administrator, Allegheny County Health Department, Air Quality Program Sunday, June 19 • Full Day Courses AIR-173: CALPUFF Version 7 Introductory Course 8:00am-5:00pm Instructors: Irene Lee, Managing Scientist, Exponent Christopher DesAutels, Managing Scientist, Exponent AIR- 240: Air Pollution Control and Compliance for Industrial Applications 8:00am-5:00pm Instructor: Tom McGowan, P.E., President and Founder of TMTS Associates Inc. EMGM-345: Transition to ISO 14001: 2015 – Environmental Management System Understanding the New Requirements and Transition to the New Standard 8:00am-5:00pm Instructor: Yogendra Chaudhry, Ph.D., EP, CRSP, Vice-President, Professional Services, ECO Canada Monday, June 20 • Full Day Courses AIR-205: Fabric Filter Baghouse 101 Including Fine Particle Emission Control, Baghouse Fundamental, Design, QA/QC, Troubleshooting, Filter Media Selection & Nano-Filtration 8:00am-5:00pm Instructor: John McKenna, Ph.D., Principal and Founder ETS, Inc. AIR-291: Consideration and Remediation of Air Pollutants in Municipal Solid Waste Landfilling and Incineration 8:00am-5:00pm Instructor: Dr. Amirhossein Malakamad, Associate Professor at Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Universiti Teknologi PETRONAS (UTP), Malaysia AIR-299: AERMOD Air Dispersion Modeling 8:00am-5:00pm Instructors: Jesse Thé, Ph.D., P. Eng, President Lakes Environmental Michael Hammer, CCM, Senior Product Specialist Lakes Environmental EMGM-348: Auditing ISO 14001: 2015 – Environmental Management System: Auditing the new requirements of the EMS Standard 8:00am-5:00pm Instructor: Yogendra Chaudhry, Ph.D., EP, CRSP, Vice-President, Professional Services, ECO Canada Please note: One or more of the professional development courses may have been cancelled after the printing of this program. Please refer to the Final Program Addendum for the final list of courses being offered and room locations. New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 21 Conference Information PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT COURSES STUDENT EVENTS This year’s Student and Young Professional Programs offer a mix of academic competition, career development, networking, and fun social events. The 109th Annual Conference & Exhibition is a great opportunity for students and young professionals to get the latest technical information, present and publish work, and have their voices heard by academicians, government, and industry leaders. Student Platform Paper Presentations Tuesday, June 21 – Thursday, June 23 • Storyville Hall See your fellow students present their research as platform presentations throughout the week. Student and ECI Poster Set Up Tuesday, June 21 • 2:00 pm – 2:30 pm • Storyville Hall Student Poster Competition Tuesday, June 21 • 2:30 pm – 5:30 pm • Storyville Hall Visit the Storyville Ballroom to watch as students present their posters to the judges during this year’s Student Poster Competition. The competition recognizes student posters to be the best among those considered in the undergraduate, masters and doctoral categories. Awards for exceptional posters will be provided at the Student Awards Ceremony and Reception on Wednesday, June 22. AEESP-AAEES-A&WMA Meet and Greet Lecture and Breakfast ECI Poster Judging Tuesday, June 21 • 8:00 am – 9:00 am • Imperial 5ABC All academicians (e.g., students, professionals, and contributors to A&WMA’s educational programs) are welcome to this great opportunity to network with colleagues and enjoy a continental breakfast. ECI Final Presentations The Bioremediation Option for Contaminated Sites: Moving from Laboratory Experience to Field Results Dr. John H. Pardue is the Elizabeth Howell Stewart Professor, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Louisiana State University. He is also the Director of the Hazardous Substance Research Center at LSU. Student Welcome Reception Tuesday, June 21 • 11:30 am – 12:00 pm • Storyville Hall Students participating in the Student Paper, Student Poster Competition, and the Environmental Challenge International (ECi) are invited to meet and network with fellow students from around the world. Poster setup guidelines and ECi rules will be reviewed. Refreshments provided. Tuesday, June 21 • 2:30 pm – 5:30 pm • Storyville Hall Join the ECi teams as they interact (often in surprising ways) with role players, and present their posters to the judges. Wednesday, June 22 • 1:30 pm – 3:30 pm • Storyville Hall Watch the top ranking ECi teams present their final problem solutions incorporating the “tweak” they received prior to the conference. Student Awards Ceremony and Reception Wednesday, June 22 • 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm • Storyville Hall All students and professionals participating with the Student Program are invited to the Student Awards Ceremony and Reception, which will honor exceptional students who have received scholarships, poster awards, platform paper awards, thesis and dissertation awards, and ECi awards. The Exceptional Education Award will also be awarded at this event. Sponsored by Boeing. Student Chapter Exchange Tuesday, June 21 • 12:00 pm – 12:30 pm • Storyville Hall Join your fellow students, Education Council representatives, and A&WMA staff for the Student Chapter Exchange to network and exchange ideas about A&WMA’s Student Chapters. Learn what it means to be a part of a student chapter or get tips on how to form a chapter of your own. Academia 101: How to Apply for and Get a Faculty Position Tuesday, June 21 • 12:30 pm – 1:30 pm • Storyville Hall Students and Young Professionals interested in pursuing jobs in academia are invited to learn about the academic job search process and how to prepare for an academic job. This is also an opportunity to meet with university representatives. 22 Final Program Education Council Committee Meeting Professional Development Division, Higher Education Division and Public Education Division Monday, June 20 • 8:00 am – 2:45 pm • Imperial 9 Get involved with leadership opportunities by actively participating in Education Council Committee meetings. It is a great way to have a significant impact on your profession and to network with your colleagues. Young Professionals’ Mentor Breakfast Executive Forum Luncheon Wednesday, June 22 • 8:00 am – 9:00 am • Imperial 5ABC Price: $15 This annual professional networking breakfast gives young professionals and recent graduates the opportunity to network and be mentored by an experienced environmental professional. For established professionals this is a great opportunity to connect with the industry’s next generation of rising stars. Please note, Pre-Registration is required for this event. Registration deadline is June 13, 2016. Ticket Required. Professional Development Guidance and Tools – Discussion Forum Wednesday, June 22 • 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm • Imperial 5ABC Price: $50 This new YP event will provide attendees with a unique opportunity to learn from successful professionals on how to grow their careers. A panel of distinguished professionals from different parts of the environmental field will provide invaluable insight into the highlights of their careers. Representatives from industry, consulting, legal, and the regulating perspective will help show the differences among the specific areas. Each member of the panel will discuss their individual approaches on how to handle major decisions, reaching goals, working in changing industrial climates and helpful advice for Young Professionals or those wishing to make a career change. Ticket Required Speed Networking Wednesday, June 22 • 9:30 am – 11:00 am • Imperial 9 Don’t miss this opportunity to practice your networking skills! Professionals, YPs, and students are invited to engage in a fast-paced networking exercise. Answer questions, provide perspectives, and help students get the inside track on what it’s like being a practicing professional. Young Professionals Advisory Council Monday, June 20 • 8:00 am - 2:45 pm Hyatt Regency, Room: Imperial 12, Level 4 All are welcome to attend to get involved with this initiative to engage young professionals. Speakers include: • Michelle Gehring, Principal, Coterie Environmental • Chris Nelson, Environmental Permitting Manager, 3M Company • Michael Vince, Clear Skies Environmental and Former State Regulator • Greg Johnson, Environmental Affairs Attorney, Liskow & Lewis Sponsored by A&WMA Louisiana Section. Louisiana Section Student/Young Professional Networking Reception Wednesday, June 22 • 7:00 pm – 9:30 pm Walk-On's Bistreaux and Bar Price: $25 Everyone is invited to a networking reception for young professionals, students, and A&WMA leadership. This year’s reception will have appetizers at Walk-On's Bistreaux & Bar, voted ESPN’s #1 Sports Bar in the USA. In the past 10 years, Walk-On’s has officially become the go-to place for homemade food and an incredible experience. Ticket Required. (Tickets must be purchased in advance. You will not be able to purchase tickets at the event.) Sponsored by BMW. New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 23 Conference Information YOUNG PROFESSIONAL (YP)/STUDENT EVENTS TECHNICAL TOURS Bus pickup is located through the exit of the tunnel area in the Hyatt lobby, right of the front desk. Occidental Chemical Corporation (OxyChem) Technical Tour Tuesday, June 21, 2016 • 9:00 am – 12:00 pm (noon) Price: $30 Occidental Chemical Corporation (OxyChem), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Occidental Petroleum Corporation, has been a part of the Louisiana business community since 1966. OxyChem is committed to conducting business in a manner that safeguards employees, protects the environment, benefits neighboring communities and strengthens regional economies. OxyChem’s Taft plant in St. Charles Parish produces chlorine, caustic soda and caustic potash – essential building blocks for life-enhancing products, including safe drinking water, Cornerstone Chemical Company Technical Tour Wednesday, June 22, 2016 • 9:00 am – 12:00 pm (noon) Price $30 Cornerstone Chemical Company is a diversified chemical manufacturer located in Waggaman, Louisiana. Cornerstone’s Fortier Manufacturing Complex was established in 1952 on approximately 800 acres of land by the Mississippi River that was originally the site of a sugar cane plantation founded in the late 1700’s. Chemicals manufactured at the site include acetonitrile, acrylamide, acrylonitrile, hydrogen cyanide, melamine, methacrylic acid, methyl methacrylate, oleum, urea, sulfuric acid, and will include ammonia once construction of the new plant is finalized. These products are critical building block components used in a diverse range of high-value, 24 Final Program wastewater treatment, pharmaceuticals, soaps and detergents, and pulp and paper. This tour will consist of a guided windshield tour within the manufacturer’s complex, including a visit to one of the facility’s “state of the art” control rooms, where you will receive an overview of the manufacturing complex and associated environmental controls and operations. To enter the plant, participants must possess a valid form of identification, such as a government issued photo I.D., TWIC, passport, etc. for review and verification prior to entry. Visitors may be required to review safety requirements prior to entry to the facility. Stop by Registration to inquire if this tour is open to register. Bus departs at the Hyatt Regency promptly at 9:00 am. Buses to pick up on Loyola Avenue. Bus Pickup is located through the main lobby entrance doors. Ticket Required. high-potential end markets which include but are not limited to residential and commercial construction, automotive, enhanced oil recovery, hydraulic fracturing, water treatment, aerospace, agricultural, pharmaceutical, and pulp & paper. This tour will consist of a guided windshield tour within the manufacturing complex where you will receive an overview of the manufacturing complex’s operations and associated environmental controls and operations occurring at the site. To enter the plant, participants must possess a valid form of identification such as a government issued photo I.D., TWIC, passport, etc. for review and verification prior to entry. Stop by Registration to inquire if this tour is open to register. Bus departs at the Hyatt Regency promptly at 9:00 am. Buses to pick up on Loyola Avenue. Bus Pickup is located through the main lobby entrance doors. Ticket Required. Conference Information projects total $739 million, representing the most aggressive and important rebuilding effort in the 110-year history of the Sewerage & Water Board. Sewerage & Water Board of New Orleans, Louisiana: Inside the East Bank Wastewater Treatment Plant Technical Tour Thursday, June 23, 2016 • 9:00 am – 12:00 pm (noon) Price $30 The East Bank Wastewater Treatment Plant (EBWWTP) was originally constructed in 1973 and upgraded in 1980, expanding treatment capacity to 122 million gallons per day (MGD). The plant is located on the east bank of the Mississippi River, near the St. Bernard Parish line, and serves the entire East Bank of Orleans Parish. Two 54-inch and one 60-inch sewer mains deliver wastewater to the plant for initial treatment, where screens remove trash and debris. The plant is capable of providing full treatment to more than 120 million gallons of wastewater every day, though on average, the plant receives and treats approximately 105 million gallons. Hurricane Katrina Recovery - In August 2005, Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast and left the East Bank Plant under 20 feet of water. Immediate recovery efforts were successful with treatment restored in just three months. Since Katrina, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has obligated $244 million in wastewater system recovery projects, including the continued rehabilitation of the plant and repair or replacement of pumping stations and other key infrastructure. Water, drainage, and wastewater Wetlands Assimilation - The Sewerage & Water Board of New Orleans and Veolia have worked with Tulane University since 2011 on a wetlands assimilation project. The project incorporates chemically-treated bio-solids into wetlands for nutrient enhancement and long-term stabilization. The goal is to raise the elevation of the wetlands by one meter, facilitating the growth of cypress and tupelo tree seedlings, and restore an urban-degraded wetland to a lavish cypress forest. The wetlands sequester 100,000 tons of carbon annually – equivalent to removing exhaust from 18,000 automobiles each year. Drainage System - There are 22 drainage pumping stations (DPS) in New Orleans, with a total pumping capacity of over 29 billion gallons a day. That flow rate (over 45,000 cubic feet per second) is more than the flow rate of the Ohio River. This tour will include the East Bank Wastewater Treatment Plant, the Wetlands Assimilation Project and Drainage Pumping Station #5. The tour is limited to 30 persons and will require preregistration and a security check prior to the tour. Registration is required by June 1st to attend this tour. Bus departs at the Hyatt Regency promptly at 9:00 am. Buses to pick up on Loyola Avenue. Bus Pickup is located through the main lobby entrance doors. Ticket Required. New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 25 NETWORKING EVENTS Exhibit Hall Grand Opening Networking Reception Monday, June 20 • 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm • Elite Hall Immediately following the Keynote Program, join your fellow attendees and presenters for the Grand Opening Networking Reception in the Exhibit Hall. It’s the perfect opportunity to meet with leading environmental professionals showcasing their latest products and services. Enjoy drinks and appetizers while exploring the booths and displays, and don’t miss out on a chance to win this year’s attendee giveaway prize. Grand Reception* Tuesday, June 21 • 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm Empire Ballroom A Please join us on Tuesday evening for the ACE 2016 Mardi Gras Masquerade Grand Reception. Enjoy a fun and relaxed evening with old and new friends while tasting some of the best New Orleans cuisine on the bayou. Don’t miss this opportunity to experience a taste of New Orleans and to support A&WMA’s Scholarship Fund by participating in this year's raffle. Ticket required. Scholarship Raffle Drawing Thursday, June 23 Drawn at the Honors and Awards Ceremony Help support future environmental scientists and leaders by participating in the Scholarship Raffle Drawing. Tickets will be sold at the registration desk from Sunday through Thursday morning. In addition, tickets will be sold at the council meetings and the Grand Reception. The cost of the Tickets will be $5 each. (Cash only accepted). Winners will be drawn at the Honors & Awards Ceremony and Luncheon. The winners do not need to be present. The winner can pick up their prize at the registration desk. All proceeds directly benefit the A&WMA Scholarship Fund. Sponsored by Placid Refining Company. Executive Forum Luncheon (New!) Professional Development Guidance and Tools – Discussion Forum Wednesday, June 22 • 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm • Imperial 5ABC Price: $50 See page 23 for description and speakers. Sponsored by A&WMA Louisiana Section. Louisiana Section Exhibitor Happy Hour Wednesday, June 22 • 3:00 pm - 4:00 pm • Elite Hall Join us for the last hour in the Exhibit Hall to connect with exhibitors and colleagues during the Exhibitor Happy Hour, back by popular demand. Take advantage of this opportunity to network and get those last-minute business cards from key suppliers to add to your professional network. Young Professional/Student Networking Reception Wednesday, June 22 • 7:00 pm – 9:30 pm Walk-On's Bistreaux and Bar Price: $25 Everyone is invited to a networking reception for young professionals, students, and A&WMA professionals. This year’s reception will have appetizers and drinks at Walk-On's Bistreaux & Bar, voted ESPN’s #1 Sports Bar in the USA. In the past 10 years, Walk-On’s has officially become the go-to place for homemade food and an incredible experience. Ticket Required. (Tickets must be purchased in advance. You will not be able to purchase tickets at the event.) Sponsored by BMW. Annual Honors & Awards Ceremony and Luncheon* Thursday, June 23 • 11:50 am - 1:20 pm Empire Hall BCD Join A&WMA members at this popular luncheon as they recognize the accomplishments of outstanding individuals, organizations, and companies. Ticket required. Nomination Forms for 2017 A&WMA Honors & Awards can be found online at http://www.awma.org/about-awma/honors-awards. * Included with full conference registration or available for purchase 26 Final Program Thank you to all of our organizational members for their support of membership and A&WMA conferences, events, and activities this past year as we continue to strive to provide optimum products and services to meet your needs. 3M Company ADA Carbon Solutions ADEC Division Of Air Quality AECOM AET Environmental AGAT Laboratories Air Quality Services, LLC Air Resource Specialists, Inc. Air Sciences Inc. Akron Regional AQMD Alberta Energy Regulator Alberta Environment ALL4 Inc. Allegheny County Health Department AMEC American Airlines American Petroleum Institute (API) Apex Geoscience Archer Daniels Midland Company August Mack Environmental Babst Calland Barnes & Thornburg LLP Barr Engineering Company Battelle Bay Area Air Quality Management District Bingham Greenebaum Doll LLP BP Exploration (Alaska), Inc. Breitling consulting Bullock Environmental, LLC Burns & McDonnell Engineering Co., Inc. California ARB - Cal/EPA Library Capital Power Corporation Capital Regional District CH2M HILL Chevron Energy Technology Company CITGO Petroleum Corporation Civil & Environmental Consultants, Inc. CK Associates Clark County Colorado Springs Utilities Compliance Assurance Associates, Inc. Conestoga-Rovers & Associates Consumers Energy Cornerstone Environmental Group, LLC CR CleanAir Dakota Gasification Company Davis Graham & Stubbs LLP Dillon Consulting Limited DSG Solutions, LLC Duke Energy Eastern Research Group EHS Technology Group, LLC Eli Lilly And Company Entergy List as of April 30, 2016 Environment Canada Envirotech Associates Limited Epsilon Associates, Inc. ERM Faulkner Industrial Flint Hills Resources Forsyth County, NC GAI Consultants, Inc. Georgia-Pacific LLC Golden Valley Electric Association Gopher Resource Hennepin County H-Gac Huntington Ingalls Industries Idaho Department of Environmental Quality KEY Environmental, Inc. Kleinfelder KS Dept. Of Health & Environment Lake Michigan Air Director's Consortium Lakes Environmental Software Lane Regional Air Protection Agency Langan Engineering And Environmental Services, Inc. LEHDER Environmental Services Levelton Consultants Ltd. LG2 Environmental Solutions, Inc. Locke Lord LLP Los Angeles County Sanitation District Louisiana DEQ Maryland Dept. of the Environment Mesa Laboratories Meteorological Solutions Inc. Metro Vancouver Ministry Of Environment Minnesota Pollution Control Agency Mississippi Dept. Of Environmental Quality Mojave Desert AQMD Montrose Environmental Group, Inc. NCDENR - Division Of Air Quality Nebraska DEQ Nevada DEP Noranda Alumina LLC Northern Tier Energy Northwest Clean Air Agency Novel Geo-Environmental, LLC Novus Environmental NRG Energy Nucor Corporation NV Energy NY State Dept. Of Env. Conservation Oklahoma Dept. of Environmental Quality Olympic Region Clean Air Agency PA DEP / Bureau Of Air Quality Palm Beach County Public Hlth. PDC Energy PPG Industries, Inc. PPM Consultants, Inc. Providence Engineering Ramboll Environ RECES, LLC Regional Air Pollution Control Agency (RAPCA) Research Triangle Institute RTP Environmental Associates RWDI Air Inc. S&ME, Inc. Salt River Project San Joaquin Valley APCD SCAQMD Sierra Research, Inc. SLR International Corp Sonoma Technology, Inc. Southern California Edison Co. Southern Company Southern Environmental, Inc Stanley Consultants, Inc. Stantec Consulting Ltd. Steptoe & Johnson PLLC Stericycle, Inc. Taiwan Power Company Tampa Electric Company Tennessee Air Pollution Control The Boeing Company The Dow Chemical Company Plaquemine Site The Mosaic Company Trinity Consultants Tucson Electric Power Company US EPA Region 4 US EPA Region 7 (AWMD) Utah Division of Air Quality Washington Dept. of Ecology Washoe County Health District Waste Management Weaver Consultants Group Wenck Associates, Inc. Weyerhaeuser Whiting Oil And Gas Corporation Wilcox Environmental Engineering Winstead PC Woodard & Curran Xcel Energy Yolo-Solano AQMD Zephyr Environmental Corporation New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 27 Conference Information A&WMA THANKS ITS ORGANIZATIONAL MEMBERS Continuing Education Course and Annual Conference attendees may request a certificate of participation. This certificate may be eligible for Continuing Education Units (CEUs) and in some cases Continuing Legal Education (CLE) and/or Professional Engineering (P.E.) credit. One-day courses consist of 7 contact hours and half day courses consist of 3.5 contact hours. Credit for the Annual Conference (Technical Program) will be awarded on a daily basis. To obtain instructions on how to request a certificate of participation, you should visit the registration desk or see your course instructor for the proper application procedure. All certificate requests will be processed after the Annual Conference. For information regarding Continuing Education credit, please contact Gloria Henning, A&WMA Education Programs Associate at [email protected] or by phone at 412-904-6021. 28 Final Program Exhibition EXHIBITION New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 29 WHAT’S HAPPENING ON THE EXHIBIT FLOOR Located in Elite Hall, First floor Exhibit Hall Hours: Monday, June 20: Tuesday, June 21: Wednesday, June 22: 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm 9:00 am – 5:30 pm 9:30 am – 4:00 pm Exhibition Grand Opening Networking Reception Monday, June 20 • 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm Immediately following the Keynote Program, join your fellow attendees and presenters for the Grand Opening Networking Reception in the Exhibit Hall. It’s the perfect opportunity to meet with leading environmental professionals showcasing their latest products and services. Enjoy drinks and appetizers while exploring the booths and displays, and don’t miss out on a chance to win this year’s attendee give-away prize. Exhibitor Happy Hour Wednesday, June 22 • 3:00 pm - 4:00 pm Join us for the last hour in the Exhibit Hall to connect with exhibitors and friends during the Exhibitor Happy Hour, back by popular demand. Take advantage of this last opportunity to network and get those last-minute business cards from key suppliers to add to your professional network. It is sure to be a happy event. Refreshment Breaks Please join our many exhibitors for refreshment breaks in the exhibit hall between technical sessions. Charging Station NEW in the exhibit hall! Need a re-charge for your phone or iPad? Forget your power cord in your hotel room? For everyone that has been there/done that.... use the Charging Station to power up so you (and your electronic devices) can get refreshed for the rest of the day. Sponsored by Entergy 30 Final Program EXHIBIT HALL FLOOR PLAN ,_OPIP[6MMPJL Exhibition :LY]PJL+LZR New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 31 EXHIBITORS BY COMPANY 2B Technologies, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 EnviroSuite. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127 S P T C., Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 A&B Labs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 ERG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 426 S&ME, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 428 ACZ Laboratories, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 612 ERM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 712 Scintec Corporation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 310 Adwest Technologies, Inc., a CECO Environmental Company . . . . . . . . . . . 314 EUEC 2016 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208 Sibata USA Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 420 FLIR Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 303 SKC Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 432 Gasmet Technologies Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 320 Spirit Environmental, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . 311 Geosyntec Consultants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 427 Sutron Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 805 GHD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225 Taylor & Francis Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 326 Grimm Technologies, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 513 Terra Applied Systems LLC . . . . . . . . . . . 321 IRcameras, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203 Tisch Environmental, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 713 J.U.M. Engineering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 215 TRC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 221 Johnson Matthey SEC LLC . . . . . . . . . . . 312 Tri-Mer Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115 LafargeHolcim . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213 Trinity Consultants/BREEZE . . . . . . . . . . 216 Lakes Environmental Software . . . . . . . . 331 TSI Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 430 Mesa Laboratories, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325 U.S. EPA Air, Climate, Energy Program . . 615 Met One Instruments Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 332 U.S. EPA Alumni Association. . . . . . . . . . 619 MOCON - Baseline . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 330 U.S. EPA Homeland Security Research. . 617 Montrose Environmental . . . . . . . . . . . . . 324 URG Corp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 209 Munters Corp. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 327 Vapor Point, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 202 NASA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 701 VICI Metronics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210 AECOM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 233 Airflow Sciences Corporation . . . . . . . . . 422 AirMetrics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 720 Alicat Scientific/Perma Pure . . . . . . . . . . 429 ALS Environmental . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 716 Ambilabs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133 Amec Foster Wheeler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 211 American Academy of Environmental Engineers & Scientists . . . . . . . . . . . . . 721 American Ecotech . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 232 AMS Analitica S.r.l. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 431 Bloomberg BNA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 229 Bruker Optics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 214 California Analytical Instruments, Inc. . . . 302 Carbon Activated Corp.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212 CB&I. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 309 CH2M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123 CHWMEG, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 207 CleanAir Instrument Rental . . . . . . . . . . . 423 Eagle Environmental Services, Inc. . . . . . 413 EarthCon Consultants, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . 416 ECO PHYSICS, INC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 206 EcoChem Analytics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 227 EKTO Manufacturing Corporation . . . . . . 217 Element Markets LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 425 ENMET. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 414 EN-SCI. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 231 Entech Instruments, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 616 Entergy Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 419 Environics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 613 Environmental Systems Corp. (ESC) . . . . 424 32 Final Program NC State University . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121 Netronix, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 313 Ormantine USA Ltd., Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 328 Orsat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 714 Peak Laboratories, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 304 Pollution Equipment News / Rimbach Publishing, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 Process Combustion Corporation . . . . . . 329 Providence. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 315 QSEM Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 715 R.M. Young Company . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 316 Ramboll Environ US Corporation. . . . . . . 412 Rebellion Photonics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 205 Restek Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 322 RTP Environmental Associates, Inc. . . . . 601 RVT Process Equipment, Inc. . . . . . . . . . 204 EXHIBITORS BY BOOTH Peak Laboratories, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 304 Alicat Scientific/Perma Pure . . . . . . . . . . 429 2B Technologies, Inc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 CB&I. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 309 TSI Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 430 Pollution Equipment News / Rimbach Publishing, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 Scintec Corporation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 310 AMS Analitica S.r.l. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 431 Spirit Environmental, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . 311 SKC Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 432 Johnson Matthey SEC LLC . . . . . . . . . . . 312 Grimm Technologies, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 513 Netronix, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 313 RTP Environmental Associates, Inc. . . . . 601 Adwest Technologies, Inc., a CECO Environmental Company . . . . . . . . . . . 314 ACZ Laboratories, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 612 CH2M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123 EnviroSuite. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127 Providence. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 315 Ambilabs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133 R.M. Young Company . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 316 Vapor Point, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 202 Gasmet Technologies Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 320 IRcameras, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203 Terra Applied Systems LLC . . . . . . . . . . . 321 RVT Process Equipment, Inc. . . . . . . . . . 204 Restek Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 322 Rebellion Photonics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 205 Montrose Environmental . . . . . . . . . . . . . 324 ECO PHYSICS, INC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 206 Mesa Laboratories, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325 CHWMEG, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 207 Taylor & Francis Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 326 EUEC 2016 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208 Munters Corp. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 327 URG Corp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 209 Ormantine USA Ltd., Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 328 VICI Metronics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210 Process Combustion Corporation . . . . . . 329 Amec Foster Wheeler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 211 MOCON - Baseline . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 330 Carbon Activated Corp.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212 Lakes Environmental Software . . . . . . . . 331 American Academy of Environmental Engineers & Scientists . . . . . . . . . . . . . 721 LafargeHolcim . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213 Met One Instruments Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 332 Sutron Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 805 Bruker Optics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 214 Ramboll Environ US Corporation. . . . . . . 412 J.U.M. Engineering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 215 Eagle Environmental Services, Inc. . . . . . 413 Trinity Consultants/BREEZE . . . . . . . . . . 216 ENMET. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 414 EKTO Manufacturing Corporation . . . . . . 217 EarthCon Consultants, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . 416 TRC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 221 Entergy Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 419 GHD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225 Sibata USA Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 420 EcoChem Analytics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 227 Airflow Sciences Corporation . . . . . . . . . 422 Bloomberg BNA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 229 CleanAir Instrument Rental . . . . . . . . . . . 423 EN-SCI. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 231 Environmental Systems Corp. (ESC) . . . . 424 American Ecotech . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 232 Element Markets LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 425 AECOM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 233 ERG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 426 California Analytical Instruments, Inc. . . . 302 Geosyntec Consultants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 427 FLIR Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 303 S&ME, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 428 S P T C., Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 Tri-Mer Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115 NC State University . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121 Environics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 613 U.S. EPA Air, Climate, Energy Program . . 615 Entech Instruments, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 616 U.S. EPA Homeland Security Research. . 617 U.S. EPA Alumni Association. . . . . . . . . . 619 NASA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 701 ERM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 712 Tisch Environmental, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 713 Orsat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 714 QSEM Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 715 ALS Environmental . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 716 AirMetrics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 720 New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 33 Exhibition A&B Labs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 EXHIBITORS BY COMPANY 2B Technologies, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 2100 Central Avenue, Suite 105 Boulder, CO 80301 Phone: 303-273-0559 Fax: 303-277-1812 http://www.twobtech.com/ [email protected] Adwest Technologies, Inc., a CECO Environmental Company . . . . . 314 1175 North Van Horne Way Anaheim, CA 92806 Phone: (714) 632-9801 Fax: (714) 632-9812 http://www.adwestusa.com AirMetrics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 720 1940 Don Street, Suite 300 Springfield, OR 97477 Phone: (541) 683-5420 Fax: (541) 683-1047 http://www.airmetrics.com [email protected] 2B Technologies, Inc. is dedicated to the development and commercialization of portable analytical instruments for atmospheric and environmental measurements. We specialize in miniaturized instruments for measurements of ozone in air and water as well as NOx(NO/NO2) in air. Adwest has installed over 1200 RETOX RTO Thermal Oxidizer and VOC Concentrator systems for cost effective VOC Abatement with 99%+ DRE. Our RTOs can be designed with up to 97% Thermal efficiency for ultra low energy usage. Halogenated RTO systems can be provided with HEE-Duall scrubber systems and FlexKleen fabric filter particulate removal systems for a ONE CECO abatement solution. RETOX RTOs provide NOx-Free VOC Compliance with Adwest’s unique flameless NGI Operation. Airmetrics is dedicated to providing practical and innovative solutions to ambient air monitoring problems. We manufacture the MiniVol™ TAS and offer a complimentary line of calibration orifice and filter cassettes. We also provide calibration services, and rental samplers. A&B Labs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 10100 East Freeway, Suite 100 Houston, TX 77029 Phone: 713-453-6060 Fax: 713-453-6091 http://www.ablabs.com [email protected] Since 1989, A & B Labs has been providing analytical services in environmental, industrial hygiene, microbiology, and asbestos. Striving to exceed all applicable regulatory accreditation requirements, we are proud of our certifications and accreditations - please see website for detailed listing. ACZ Laboratories, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 612 2773 Downhill Drive Steamboat Springs, CO 80487 Phone: (800) 334-5493 Fax: 815-301-3857 http://acz.com/ [email protected] Founded in 1980, ACZ Laboratories, Inc. is a full service analytical environmental testing laboratory with inorganic, organic and radiochemical capabilities, specializing in the analysis of trace level contaminants in air, water, soil, sediment, sludge, waste, plant and biota tissue. We strive to provide high quality data and superior customer service. 34 Final Program AECOM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 233 9400 Amberglen Boulevard Austin, Texas, 78729 Phone: 512-454-4797 Fax: 512-454-8807 http://www.aecom.com [email protected] As the number and stringency of air, waste and environmental regulatory requirements increases, AECOM is working with our clients to strategize and implement compliance solutions using innovative approaches and advanced technology. With 85,000 employees in 150 countries, AECOM is at the forefront— tackling issues with strategic thinking and collaboration. Airflow Sciences Corporation . . . . . . . . 422 12190 Hubbard Street Livonia, MI 48150 Phone: 734-525-0300 Fax: 734-525-0303 http://www.airflowsciences.com [email protected] Our flow modeling provides cost-effective designs for ducts, pollution control systems, stacks, and more. Custom field test equipment ensures accurate and efficient measurement of flow, temperature, chemical species, and particulate. The combination of modeling, testing, and engineering expertise makes ASC the one-stop shop for all your flow-related needs. Alicat Scientific/Perma Pure. . . . . . . . . . 429 7641 North Business Park Drive Tucson, AZ 85743 Phone: 520-290-6060 Fax: (520) 290-0109 http://www.alicat.com [email protected] Portable reference gas flow meters make it easy to calibrate the flow systems of ambient air samplers and process analyzers. See NIST-traceable, real-time readings of flow, pressure and temperature in any weather from Anchorage to Miami. ALS Environmental . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 716 2655 Park Center Drive, Suite A Simi Valley, CA 93065 Phone: 805-526-7161 Fax: 805-526-7270 http://www.alsglobal.com [email protected] ALS Environmental’s Simi Valley, California location is a nationally recognized, 22,000 square-foot air testing laboratory specializing in the analysis of ambient/indoor air pollution, stationary source emissions, process gas, and industrial hygiene samples. The laboratory also maintains an inventory of over 3,000 pre-cleaned passivated stainless steel canisters. EXHIBITORS BY COMPANY American Ecotech . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 232 Factory D, 100 Elm Street Warren, RI 02885 Phone: (401) 247-0100 Fax: (401) 537-9166 http://www.americanecotech.com [email protected] Bruker Optics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 214 19 Fortune Drive Billerica, MA 01821 Phone: (978) 439-9899 Fax: (978) 663-9177 http://www.bruker.com/remotesensing [email protected] Ambilabs is a full services provider and integrator of air, environmental, and process monitoring solutions. We distribute, install, and train on a broad range of gas and particulate monitoring instrumentation. Our experienced staff provide expertise, engineering, software, instrumentation, systems and solutions for obtaining valid, accurate, and precise air quality data. American Ecotech specializes in supplying state of the art instruments measuring specific gases, aerosols, and particulate airborne matter, including gas analyzers to measure NOx, CO, SO2, CO2, NH3, H2S, NOy, and/or ozone. We supply digital dataloggers, and advanced remote maintenance software for automated field data validation and reporting. Bruker Optics provides open path standoff detection systems for automatic airborne chemical detection at distances up to several kilometers. Applications include fence line monitoring, ambient air studies, fugitive gas identification, and other remote sensing studies. Passive detection systems are also available, providing 2-dimensional video images of cloud location and concentration. Amec Foster Wheeler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 211 1105 Lakewood Parkway, Suite 300 Alpharetta, GA 30009 Phone: (770) 360-0600 http://www.amecfw.com/ [email protected] AMS Analitica S.r.l.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 431 Piazzale Coralloni, 12 Pesaro, Italy 61122 Phone: +39 0721 26243 Fax: +39 0721 26285 http://www.amsanalitica.com [email protected] Amec Foster Wheeler designs, delivers and maintains strategic and complex assets for its customers across the global energy and related sectors. With over 40,000 people in more than 55 countries, the company operates in the oil and gas, mining, clean energy, power generation, pharma, environment and infrastructure markets. AMS ANALITICA is an Italian manufacturer of air sampling equipments. Produces instruments for PM10 and PM2.5 dust sampling in accordance with European and US EPA requirements. Supplies also sampling systems and accessories for pollutants in emissions,high volume samplers for PM10 and PM2.5, micropollutants, PCDD, PCDF and TSP. American Academy of Environmental Engineers & Scientists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 721 147 Old Solomon’s Island Road, #303 Annapolis, MD 21401 Phone: (601) 961-5670 Fax: (601) 961-5725 http://www.aaees.org [email protected] Bloomberg BNA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 229 1801 South Bell Street Arlington, VA 22202 Phone: (800) 372-1033 Fax: (800) 253-0332 http://www.bna.com/ehs [email protected] The American Academy of Environmental Engineering and Scientists® serves the Environmental Engineering and Environmental Science professions by providing Board Certification to those who qualify through experience and testing. The Academy also provides training, participates in accrediting universities, sponsors university lecture series, and rewards outstanding achievements through its international awards program. Visit Bloomberg BNA at booth 229 to see how our family of EHS solutions enables your organization to effectively manage every phase of EHS compliance – giving you confidence that your organization complies with federal, state, and international laws and regulations. Visit www.bna.com/ehs for a free trial. California Analytical Instruments, Inc. . . . 302 1312 West Grove Avenue Orange, CA 92865 Phone: (714) 974-5560 Fax: (714) 921-2531 http://www.gasanalyzers.com [email protected] CAI is a premier provider of quality gas analyzers and systems for use in industrial, environmental, process, and automotive emissions measurement applications. Our analyzers utilize technologies such as: Chemiluminescence, Non-Dispersive Infrared (NDIR), Flame Ionization (FID), Paramagnetic, Photoacoustic Infrared Spectroscopy and Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) for measurement of virtually any gas. Carbon Activated Corp. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212 2250 South Central Avenue Compton, CA 90220 Phone: (310) 885-4555 Fax: (310) 885-4558 http://www.activatedcarbon.com [email protected] Carbon Activated Corp. (CAC) is a global leader in supplying high-quality activated carbon and related services and one of the forerunners in providing various types of activated carbon and filter media carrying NSF-61 certification and manufactured to A.W.W.A. Standards. New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 35 Exhibition Ambilabs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133 Factory D, 100 Elm Street Warren, RI 02885 Phone: (401) 247-0100 Fax: (401) 537-9166 http://www.ambilabs.com [email protected] EXHIBITORS BY COMPANY CB&I. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 309 2103 Research Forest Drive The Woodlands, TX 77380 Phone: 832-513-1000 Fax: 832-513-1905 http://www.cbi.com [email protected] CleanAir Instrument Rental . . . . . . . . . . 423 500 West Wood Street Palatine, IL 60067 Phone: 847-991-3300 Fax: 847-934-8260 http://rental.cleanair.com/ [email protected] CB&I is the most complete energy infrastructure focused company in the world. With 125 years of experience and the expertise of approximately 54,000 employees, CB&I provides reliable solutions while maintaining a relentless focus on safety and an uncompromising standard of quality. Industry today faces ever-changing and increasingly complex regulatory requirements for air emissions. CleanAir engineers apply decades of experience to help our clients understand and comply with these requirements. Our expertise includes assistance with permitting issues, regulatory negotiations, consent decrees, training, and of course, air emissions testing and instrumentation rental. CH2M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123 9191 South Jamaica Street Englewood, CO 80112 Phone: (720) 286-2000 Fax: (720) 286-9090 http://www.ch2m.com [email protected] CH2M provides consulting, design, engineering, project management and delivery of infrastructure and resources to clients in public and private sectors. With revenues approaching US$5.5 billion, the firm is in 94 countries and more than 22,000 strong, with global headquarters near Denver, Colorado. CHWMEG, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 207 470 William Pitt Way Pittsburgh, PA 15238 Phone: 412-826-5003 http://www.chwmeg.org [email protected] CHWMEG conducts comprehensive reviews of waste processors & recycling facilities worldwide. CHWMEG’s 270+ member enterprises (780+ participating entities) receive high-quality, detailed, objective information concerning potential business risk at reviewed facilities. A unique cost-sharing approach provides significant member savings (over $47 million documented!) and adds considerably to corporate waste stewardship programs. 36 Final Program Eagle Environmental Services, Inc. . . . . 413 18379 Petroleum Drive Baton Rouge, LA 70809 Phone: 225-757-0870 Fax: (225) 757-8855 http://www.eaglered.com [email protected] Eagle Environmental Services, Inc. is a full service provider of comprehensive environmental services to clients in the industrial and government sectors in the Gulf Coast region. Eagle Environmental focuses on our core business principle that service to and the satisfaction of our clients are our absolute top priority. EarthCon Consultants, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . 416 1880 West Oak Parkway Bldg. 100, Suite 106 Marietta, GA 30062 Phone: 770-973-2100 Fax: (866) 263-0098 http://www.earthcon.com/ [email protected] EarthCon offers a wide range of environmental engineering, consulting and remediation services to address the challenges you face throughout each phase of your business transactions. Whether you are ready to purchase, sell, design, construct, operate, expand, renovate or decommission a property EarthCon can team with you to achieve your goals. ECO PHYSICS, INC.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 206 3915 Research Park Drive, Suite A-3 Ann Arbor, MI 48108 Phone: 734-998-1600 http://www.ecophysics-us.com [email protected] NOx, Ammonia, O2 and CO2 analyzers for emissions measurements for regulatory compliance. We are the leading supplier for combustion and atmospheric research. Heated sample inlet systems for measurement of hot, wet samples, and dual inlet analyzers for simultaneous measurement of two separate samples. We have a solution for you! EcoChem Analytics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 227 202 Reynolds Avenue League City, TX 77573 Phone: 281-338-9888 Fax: 281-332-6152 http://www.ecochem.biz [email protected] MC3 CEMS - Premier hot-wet extractive multicomponent CEMS for measuringl NOx, HCl, NH3, SO2, CO, CO2, H2O and O2. Panel-mount and standalone enclosure configurations. HW5 Heated Probe. Cemtrac3 Regulatory-compliance Data Acquisition System (DAS). Hovacal hot vapor calibrator. Carbon aerosol and Diffusion Charger for particle measurement. EKTO Manufacturing Corporation. . . . . 217 83 Eagle Drive, P.O. Box 449 Sanford, ME 04073 Phone: (207) 324-4427 Fax: (207) 324-4667 http://www.ekto.com [email protected] For 48 years EKTO’s high quality equipment shelters & enclosures have been “”field tested”“ on every continent including Antarctica! Custom built, stationary or mobile, light weight & highly insulated, they are made to fit your needs, from small enclosures to large, doublewide shelters to suit worldwide climate conditions and meet local requirements. EXHIBITORS BY COMPANY Entech Instruments, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 616 2207 Agate Court Simi Valley, CA 93065 Phone: 805-527-5939 Fax: 805-527-7913 http://www.entechinst.com [email protected] Environmental Systems Corp. (ESC) . . . 424 10801 North Mopac Expway Bldg 1, Ste 200 Austin, TX 78759 Phone: 512-250-7900 Fax: 512-258-5836 http://envirosys.com/ Element Markets, founded in 2005, has become the leading marketer of environmental commodities in the US with over $1.6 Billion in transactions completed. We provide strategic environmental asset management support and are the experts in managing the generation (banking), procurement, and monetization of Emission Credits and Greenhouse Gas Credits. Entech Instruments is a leading developer and manufacturer of analytical instrumentation that supports professionals in the Environmental, Industrial Hygiene, Food & Beverage, Product Testing, Forensic & Clinical Analysis markets. We specialize in the creation of inert sample collection equipment as well as GC & GC/MS sample preparation and introduction technologies. ESC is a trusted provider and the market leader in Data Acquisition Systems (DAS) for air regulatory compliance monitoring. We are committed to keeping environmental professionals up-to-date with the latest requirements through our software, controllers, services and training. Stop by and ask us how we can make your job easier. ENMET . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 414 680 Fairfield Court Ann Arbor, MI 48108 Phone: 734-761-1270 Fax: 734-761-3220 http://www.enmet.com [email protected] ENMET manufactures portable and multichannel hazardous gas detection instruments for environmental compliance and industrial health and safety monitoring. Applications include trace level photoionizable chemicals, LEL and ppm hydrocarbons, formaldehyde, CO2, dew point, oxygen, and many toxic gases including O3, Cl2, SO2, NH3, etc. EN-SCI. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 231 1325 W. 121st Ave. Westminster, CO 80234 Phone: 314-484-9774 Fax: (303) 440-1965 http://en-sci.com [email protected] EN-SCI manufactures several models of the ECC Ozonesonde for ozone measurement and the CFH (Cryogenic Frostpoint Hygrometer) sondes. The EN-SCI ECC Ozonesonde was developed by Dr. Walter Komhyr and has been sold for decades by EN-SCI Corporation. Both instruments are lightweight, compact, and inexpensive instruments for precise atmospheric measurement. Entergy Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 419 639 Loyola Avenue, L-ENT-6B New Orleans, LA 70113 Phone: (504) 576-5246 Fax: (504) 576-3351 http://www.entergy.com [email protected] Entergy is an integrated energy company engaged primarily in electric power production and retail distribution operations. Entergy owns/operates power plants with approximately 30,000 megawatts of capacity, including nearly 10,000 megawatts of nuclear power. Entergy delivers electricity to 2.8 million customers in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas. Environics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 613 69 Industrial Park Road East Tolland, CT 06084 Phone: (860) 872-1111 Fax: (860) 870-9333 http://www.environics.com [email protected] Environics designs and manufactures gas flow management systems including gas calibrators, zero air generators, ozone transfer standards, and gas mixing/dilution systems. These instruments utilize Environics’ unique technology and are precise analytical tools intended to enhance the accuracy, repeatability and reproducibility of any gas analytic device. EnviroSuite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127 146 Arthur Street, Level 1 North Sydney, Australia 2060 Phone: 61488614621 Fax: 61298700999 http://www.envirosuite.com [email protected] EnviroSuite is an integrated, on-line system for displaying and analyzing real-time, historical and predictive environmental data. It connects to existing or bespoke monitoring systems, and has embedded models and analytics that allow complex functions to be done simply and routinely. EnviroSuite is a cloud-based SaaS system with high data security. ERG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 426 1600 Perimeter Park Drive, Suite 200 Morrisville, NC 27560 Phone: (781) 674-7200 Fax: (781) 674-2851 http://www.erg.com/ [email protected] ERG supports government agencies in their efforts to ensure safe air and water quality. We develop air quality emission inventories, permits, and regulations, and operate an accredited laboratory which provides ambient network monitoring design and operation, sample collection and analysis services, emissions testing, and measurements methods development and evaluation. New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 37 Exhibition Element Markets LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 425 3555 Timmons Lane, Suite 900 Houston, TX 77027 Phone: (281) 610-0164 Fax: (281) 207-7211 http://www.elementmarkets.com [email protected] EXHIBITORS BY COMPANY ERM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 712 1 Beacon Street, Floor 5 Boston, MA 02108 Phone: (617) 797-7120 http://www.erm.com [email protected] Environmental Resources Management (ERM) is a leading global provider of environmental, health, safety, risk, social consulting services and sustainability related services. We have more than 5,000 people in over 40 countries and territories working out of more than 160 offices. EUEC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208 PO Box 66076 Tucson, AZ 85728 Phone: 520-615-3535 Fax: (602) 296-0199 http://www.euec.com [email protected] EUEC2017 will host over 2,000 ATTENDEES 400 SPEAKERS - 200 EXHIBITS in the San Diego Convention Center from Feb. 8–10, 2017. EUEC facilitates information exchange & fosters cooperation between industry, government, & regulatory stake-holders for the protection of our environment & energy security. FLIR Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 303 9 Townsend West Nashua, NH 03063 Phone: (603) 324-7600 Fax: (603) 324-7834 http://www.flir.com [email protected] FLIR OGI cameras let you see industrial gases and chemical compounds invisible to the naked eye, displaying leaks as plumes of vapor. Learn how FLIR’s powerful GF-Series can help show you where fugitive SF6, refrigerants, and other harmful gases are escaping at www.flir.com/gf-series. 38 Final Program Gasmet Technologies Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . 320 956A The Queensway Toronto, ON M8Z 1P5 Phone: (866) 685-0050 Fax: (416) 368-3698 http://www.gasmet.com [email protected] Grimm Technologies, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 513 PO Box 6358 Douglasville, GA 30154 Phone: (770) 577-0853 Fax: (770) 577-0955 http://grimm-aerosol.com [email protected] Gasmet’s range of FTIR gas analyzers provide a cost-effective solution. Gasmet’s CEMS II or In-Situ and the compact & rugged DX4000 portable FTIR provide simultaneous measurement of many key pollutants including H2O, HCl, HF, Ammonia, NOx, SO2, CO, CO2, GHG’s & VOC’s including formaldehyde, and many others gases. Grimm designs, manufactures, sales and services a line of real-time environmental PM monitors. Grimm’s Instruments carry US EPA FEM certification for PM-2.5. Instruments have the capability to simultaneously provide measurements of PM-10; PM-2.5; PM-1; TSP as well as counts in 31 channels from 250 nm to 32000nm. Geosyntec Consultants. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 427 5420 Corporate Boulevard, Suite 202 Baton Rouge, LA 70808 Phone: 225-929-7333 Fax: (225) 929-7334 http://www.geosyntec.com [email protected] IRcameras, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203 30 South Calle Cesar Chavez, Suite D Santa Barbara, CA 93103 Phone: (508) 668-5650 Fax: (508) 668-5054 http://www.ircameras.com [email protected] Geosyntec Consultants delivers innovative applications of proven and emerging scientific and engineering technologies for complex problems involving our environment, natural resources, and infrastructure. Our 1,250 practitioners routinely assist firms navigating complex regulatory environments to ensure compliance, minimizing operational and financial impacts. Offices in North America, Europe, Asia, and Australia. IRC’s Niatros MWIR optical gas imaging camera cores are among today’s most advanced cooled thermal infrared sensor packages. Available in a choice of FPA formats, our Niatros cameras are designed to detect hydrocarbon gases, and display the results in real time through a choice of video outputs. GHD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225 2055 Niagara Falls Boulevard Niagara Falls, NY 14304 Phone: 716-297-6150 Fax: 716-297-2265 http://www.ghd.com [email protected] GHD is one of the world’s leading privately owned professional services companies operating in the water, energy and resources, environment, property and buildings, and transportation markets. Established in 1928, we employ more than 8,500 people in 200+ offices across the globe, including 4,000 staff in North America. J.U.M. Engineering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 215 Gauss-Str 5 Karlsfeld, Germany 85757 Phone: +49-8131-50416 Fax: +49-8131-98894 http://www.jum-aerosol.com [email protected] Since over 40 years J.U.M. Engineering is a manufacturer of a wide variety of heated total hydrocarbon analyzers, non methane and non ethane hydrocarbon analyzers . They can be stationary and portable. Aerosol can leak detectors, FID related sampling instruments and data loggers are also made. Manufacturing in Germany. Johnson Matthey SEC LLC. . . . . . . . . . . 312 29712 Aliso Creek Road, Suite 210 Aliso Viejo, CA 92656 Phone: 949-297-5200 Fax: 949-297-5210 www.jmsec.com [email protected] EXHIBITORS BY COMPANY Met One Instruments Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 332 1600 Washington Boulevard Grants Pass, OR 97526 Phone: (541) 471-7111 Fax: (541) 471-7116 www.metone.com [email protected] Munters Corp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 327 225 South Magnolia Avenue Buena Vista, VA 24416 Phone: (540) 291-1111 Fax: (540) 291-3333 http://www.munters.com [email protected] LafargeHolcim personnel have more than 30 years experience using cementitious products for both in-situ and ex-situ solidification/stabilization of contaminated soils, dredge spoils, etc. Characteristic hazardous waste can be rendered non-hazardous and left in place. This is the ultimate in sustainable development, reduces leachability and is less expensive than landfilling. Met One Instruments, Inc. manufactures meteorological sensors/stations, handheld/ portable aerosol monitors, and particulate matter (PM) regulatory air samplers/monitors. Our BAM-1020 Monitor is the only betagauge manufactured in the USA with US EPA designation and TUEV certification and other country designations upon request. Systems integration across our product lines available. Munters specializes in energy recovery equipment, specifically heat exchangers for thermal/catalytic oxidizers, packaged energy recovery systems for makeup air, and environmental control systems to maintain process air temperature and humidity. Products include all-welded plate, all-welded shell and tube, packaged humidity control systems, and high efficiency indirect fired gas heaters. Lakes Environmental Software . . . . . . . 331 170 Columbia Street West, Unit 1 Waterloo, ON N2L 3L3 Phone: 519-746-5995 Fax: 519-746-0793 http://www.weblakes.com [email protected] MOCON - Baseline. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 330 PO Box 649, 19661 Highway 36 Lyons, CO 80540 Phone: (303) 823-6661 Fax: (303) 823-5151 http://www.baseline-mocon.com [email protected] NASA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 701 300 E Street NW Washington, DC 20543 Phone: 301-614-5560 Fax: (301) 614-6530 http://www.nasa.gov [email protected] Lakes Environmental is internationally recognized for its technologically advanced environmental modeling software and data products. We remain dedicated to providing industry and the regulatory community with exceptional service and cost effective environmental IT solutions. Our products increase productivity, reduce errors, and provide unique solutions in an ever-increasing regulatory constrained world. MOCON®-Baseline® Series offers environmental measurement solutions by providing gas analyzers for toxic workplace gas and indoor air quality monitoring, environmental source monitoring, and ambient air networks. Solutions include Total VOC’s, Ethylene Oxide, Acrylonitrile, Naphthalene, Diacetyl, Formaldehyde, and more; plus a complete line of piD-TECH® photoionization detectors and sensors. NASA’s Applied Sciences Program discovers and demonstrates innovative uses and practical benefits of NASA Earth science and data from NASA’s Earth-observing environmental satellites. Applied Sciences supports applied research and targeted decision-support projects. The Program currently has formal efforts in: Health & Air Quality, Disasters, Ecological Forecasting, and Water Resources. Mesa Laboratories, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325 12100 West 6th Avenue Lakewood, CO 80228 Phone: 303-987-8000 Fax: 303-987-8989 http://www.mesalabs.com [email protected] Montrose Environmental. . . . . . . . . . . . . 324 1 Park Plaza, Suite 100 Irvine, CA 92614 Phone: 949-988-3500 Fax: 949-988-3514 http://www.montrose-env.com [email protected] Ambient Particulate Sampling. Air Flow Calibration. Aerosol Science. BGI from Mesa Labs is proud to offer pioneering technology to meet and exceed US EPA requirements with ambient particulate air samplers, air flow calibrators, cyclone fractionators and aerosol science/IH. Montrose Environmental Group is a national environmental company offering Air Quality, Environmental Laboratory and Regulatory Compliance services to a diverse range of clients in industry and government. Our team of experienced engineers, scientists, chemists, and technicians provide reliable and timely environmental data using the highest technical and ethical standards. NC State University . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121 Campus Box 7547, 256 Page Hall Raleigh, NC 27596 Phone: 919-515-5440 Fax: 919-513-4823 http://engineeringonline.ncsu.edu [email protected] The College of Engineering at North Carolina State University has 16 online master degree programs available for distance students including the Master of Environmental Engineering. Individuals can take classes for professional development or towards the completion of an online graduate degree program. For more information, visit http://EngineeringOnline.ncsu.edu New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 39 Exhibition LafargeHolcim . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213 8700 West Bryn Mawr Avenue, Suite 300 Chicago, IL 60631 Phone: (313) 506-8495 Fax: (248) 593-2769 http://www.lafarge-na.com/ [email protected] EXHIBITORS BY COMPANY Netronix, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 313 3401 Grays Ferry Avenue, Building 6212 Philadelphia, PA 19146 Phone: 215-475-5133 Fax: 215-475-5133 http://htttp://www.netronixgroup.com [email protected] Peak Laboratories, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . 304 2330 Old Middlefield Way, Suite 9 Mountain View, CA 94043 Phone: 650-691-1267 Fax: 650-691-1047 http://www.peaklaboratories.com [email protected] Providence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 315 1201 Main Street Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70802 Phone: (225) 766-7400 Fax: (225) 766-7440 http://www.providenceeng.com [email protected] Netronix offers the most comprehensive turnkey solution on the market for remotely monitoring any 3rd party environmental sensor or monitor - measuring everything from air pollutants such as dust and gases to water quality and weather parameters. At Netronix we provide remote monitoring... made EASY! Peak’s field friendly GC’s continuously measure GHG’s, H2, CO, BTEX, and other atmospheric components. Suitable for most research applications (sediment, groundwater, microbial studies, etc.), Peak is the only non-NDIR, EPA approved analyzer that provides laser precision CO accuracy, low level measurements without the inflated costs of traditional CRDS methods. Environmental | Air Quality | Engineering | Planning | Disaster Recovery | Technology & Software | Placement | Surveying | Architecture – Providence is a multidisciplinary engineering and environmental consulting firm providing services around the globe. Providence means “making provisions for the future” – and this long-term, future-focused approach guides our work on every project. Ormantine USA Ltd., Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 328 1740 Convair Street Palm Bay, FL 32909 Phone: (321) 676-7003 Fax: (321) 676-7699 http://www.ormantineusa.com/ [email protected] Ormantine USA is a market leader in ambient air pollution monitoring products. We provide low cost and easy to use air samplers, covering a wide range of applications. We provide a flexible and cost effective service that tailors the application capabilities of the monitors to exact customer requirements. Orsat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 714 1416 Southmore Avenue Pasadena, TX 77502 Phone: (800) 240-3693 Fax: (713) 920-1648 http://orsat.com [email protected] Since 1994, Orsat has customized the installation and maintenance of hardware and software to produce a robust application for continuous unattended field measurement of VOCs in ambient air for Photochemical Assessment Monitoring Stations (PAMS). Orsat’s services encompass all aspects of site operation and quality control from deployment to operator training. 40 Final Program Pollution Equipment News / Rimbach Publishing, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 8650 Babcock Boulevard Pittsburgh, PA 15237 Phone: (412) 364-5366 Fax: (412) 369-9720 http://pollutionequipmentnews.com/ [email protected] Pollution Equipment News Features products for those responsible for pollution abatement systems and policies. PEN informs professionals in air pollution control, water, wastewater, and hazardous waste disposal. Industrial Hygiene News Features products for employees safety and OSHA regulations. IHN informs occupational safety & health professionals dealing with workplace safety. Process Combustion Corporation . . . . . 329 5460 Horning Road Pittsburgh, PA 15236 Phone: (412) 655-0959 Fax: (412) 650-5569 http://www.pcc-sterling.com [email protected] For 45+ years, PCC has designed, supplied & serviced combustion, heat transfer & pollution control systems worldwide. With offices in Pittsburgh, PA, USA; China and England, PCC is a global leader in pollution control. Our custom thermal/ biological oxidation designs minimize system costs, especially energy consumption, while meeting environmental regulations. QSEM Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 715 6120 South Gilmore Road, Suite 204 Fairfield, OH 45014 Phone: (513) 208-4403 Fax: (513) 742-4444 http://www.QSEMsolutions.com [email protected] QSEM Solutions is an environmental consulting firm with offices in OH, PA, NC, VA and WV serving clients across the US! Capabilities include: Air Permitting, Dispersion Modeling, Air Pollution Control Evaluations, Compliance Reporting (GHG, fee reports, SARA/TRI, etc.), Water Plan Updates and Evaluations, Auditing, Energy Assessments, and more! R.M. Young Company . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 316 2801 Aero Park Drive Traverse City, MI 49686 Phone: (231) 946-3980 Fax: (231) 946-4772 http://www.youngusa.com [email protected] The R. M. Young Company designs and manufactures precision meteorological instruments in the USA. This year, Young is introducing the ResponseONE Weather Transmitter which measures wind, temperature, relative humidity and barometric pressure. The product line includes anemometers designed specifically for air quality applications and hazardous environments demanding intrinsically safe design. EXHIBITORS BY COMPANY RTP Environmental Associates, Inc. . . . 601 285 West Esplanade Avenue, Suite 401 Kenner, LA 70065 Phone: (504) 472-9993 Fax: (504) 472-9963 http://www.rtpenv.com [email protected] S&ME, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 428 9751 Southern Pine Boulevard Charlotte, NC 28273 Phone: (704) 523-4726 Fax: (704) 525-3953 http://www.smeinc.com [email protected] A premier global consultancy, Ramboll Environ is trusted by clients to manage their most challenging environmental, health and social issues. Our independent science-first approach ensures that our strategic advice is objective and defensible. We apply integrated multidisciplinary services and tailor each solution to our client’s specific needs and challenges. RTP Environmental Associates, Inc. provides experienced, cost-effective environmental consulting services. Major services include PSD/NSR Permitting and Regulatory Assistance, BACT-LAER-MACT Determinations, Environmental Impact Statements/Assessments, Air Quality Analyses, Meteorological Dispersion Studies, Environmental Site Assessments, Regulatory Program Training Courses, and Litigation Technical Support. S&ME’s Industrial Practice Group comprises engineers and scientists with industrial operations, consulting and regulatory experience in technical environmental fields that are part of site/project development and ongoing operations. Working with you as a comprehensive team, S&ME delivers pragmatic and successoriented solutions for industrial development. Rebellion Photonics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 205 2327 Commerce Street, Suite 200 Houston, TX 77002 Phone: (817) 683-2022 Fax: (855) 677-9999 http://www.rebellionphotonics.com [email protected] Rebellion Photonics is a leader in providing spectral imaging solutions for gas leak detection. The Gas Cloud Imager Camera, is different from other leak imagers because it operates 24/7, is fully automated, identifies gas type and concentration, monitors wide areas, and provides real-time alerts and videos of the leak. Restek Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 322 110 Benner Circle Bellefonte, PA 16823 Phone: (814) 353-1300 Fax: (814) 353-1309 http://www.restek.com [email protected] Chromatography Columns & Consumables, Air Sampling, Reference Standards, Sample Prep products. RVT Process Equipment, Inc.. . . . . . . . . 204 9047 Executive Park Drive, Suite 222 Knoxville, TN 37923 Phone: 865-694-2089 Fax: 865-560-3115 http://www.rvtpe.net [email protected] RVT Process Equipment, Inc. designs and manufactures tower packing, column internals, and distillation trays. With over 40 years in the mass transfer industry, RVT has worldwide experience working with chemicals, petrochemicals, and refining. RVT specializes in scrubbing applications and has offices in the USA, Germany, and China. S P T C., Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 203-703 Bucheon Techno Park 388 Sonae-daero, Bucheon-city Gyeonggi-do, South Korea 14502 Phone: 82-32-234-4444 Fax: 82-32-234-3344 http://sptckorea.com [email protected] S P T C KOREA is Particulate monitor manufacturer for CEMS and efficient Monitoring system. P-5C can be used in a various industry of thermal power plants, cogeneration plants, waste incinerators, steel & iron industry, the petrochemical industry, cement industry, paper pulp industry, oil refinery industry, automotive industry, non-ferrous metals industry. Scintec Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 310 197 South 104th Street, Unit B Louisville, CO 80027 Phone: 303-666-7000 Fax: 303-666-8803 http://scintec.com [email protected] Scintec produces the most advanced and comprehensive line of wind and temperature profilers in SODAR, RADAR and RASS technology. Continuing scientific innovation, outstanding product design and customer oriented philosophy has made Scintec a global leader. Scintec also offers optical SCINTILLOMETERS for the measurement of boundary layer turbulence and heat flux. Sibata USA Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 420 2616 Neighborhood Walk Villa Rica, GA 30180 Phone: 770-883-2697 http://www.sibatausa.com/sibatausa/ [email protected] Sibata Scientific Technology & Sibata USA provide solutions for the protection of the Environment and Worker Safety. Sibata’s products of Ambient and Indoor Air, Water and Dust provide instrumentation to monitor the environment. Our Lab and Particle detectors, together with Glassware provide the scientific community with a range of technologies. New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 41 Exhibition Ramboll Environ US Corporation. . . . . . 412 8235 YMCA Plaza Drive, Suite 300 Baton Rouge, LA 70810 Phone: 225-408-2696 Fax: 225-408-2747 www.ramboll-environ.com [email protected] EXHIBITORS BY COMPANY SKC Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 432 863 Valley View Road Eighty Four, PA 15330 Phone: 800-752-8472 Fax: 800-752-8476 http://www.skcinc.com [email protected] Taylor & Francis Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 326 530 Walnut Street, Suite 850 Philadelphia, PA 19106 Phone: 215-625-8900 Fax: 215-606-0050 http://www.tandfonline.com [email protected] TRC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 221 650 Suffolk Street, Suite 200 Lowell, MA 01854 Phone: (978) 970-5600 Fax: (978) 453-1995 http://www.trcsolutions.com [email protected] SKC is the premier manufacturer and distributor for the Industrial Hygiene, Safety and Environmental Professional. Our innovative and collaborative approach with customers including regulatory agencies distinguishes us in the global market. SKC equipment, sampling guide and technical expertise have been an essential resource for professionals protecting the community and workplace. For two centuries, Taylor & Francis has been committed to the publication of scholarly research. Taylor & Francis publishes the official Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association. Visit the Taylor & Francis Booth to learn about our products and services, and to request FREE sample copies. Since the 1960s, TRC has served clients with air quality systems design, permitting, dispersion modeling, licensing, regulatory compliance, engineering, auditing, due diligence review, litigation support, and expert witness services. As one of the nation’s largest air measurement firms, TRC also provides emission testing, ambient monitoring, and meteorological monitoring services. Spirit Environmental, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . 311 20465 State Highway 249 Houston, TX 77070 Phone: 281-664-2490 Fax: 281-664-2491 http://www.spiritenv.com [email protected] Through partnerships, our consultants invest in and ensure our clients’ success, bringing them the best solutions for their environmental challenges through regulatory expertise. We work primarily in the energy, petroleum, chemical, manufacturing, and transportation industries. Our consultants have experience and established relationships with regulatory agencies throughout the US. Sutron Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 805 4500 WIlliams Drive PMB #405 Georgetown, TX 78633 Phone: 512-869-0544 Fax: 512-869-0993 http://www.sutron.com [email protected] Sutron Air Quality Division is an environmental company specializing in: Monitoring Systems, Multi-Gas Calibrators, Zero Air Systems, Sample Manifolds, Meteorological Instrumentation, Weather Satellite systems, Weather Prediction Models (WRF), NOAAPort, GOES, EUMESAT. Sutron’s LEADS EMS® customers: State of Texas, State of Indiana, Clark County Nevada, State of Virginia & TREX-Tribal Network. 42 Final Program Terra Applied Systems LLC . . . . . . . . . . 321 202 Reynolds Avenue League City, TX 77573 Phone: 888-256-1366 Fax: 281-605-5056 www.TASysLLC.com The TAS mission is to be a premier bridge between manufacturers and end users of emerging and maturing technologies providing applications and integrated systems. The solutions recommended by TAS are the best fit for the application, based on performance and not on vendor bias. Tisch Environmental, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 713 145 South Miami Avenue Cleves, OH 45002 Phone: (513) 467-9000 Fax: (513) 467-9009 http://www.tisch-env.com [email protected] Tisch Environmental is a family business founded to develop and manufacture air pollution monitoring instruments. The Tisch family have produced nearly half million devices for the air pollution monitoring community over the last 60 years. TEI is looking into the future needs of today’s aerosol research professionals. Tri-Mer Corporation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115 1400 Monroe Street Owosso, MI 48867 Phone: (989) 723-7838 Fax: (989) 723-7844 http://www.tri-mer.com [email protected] Tri-Mer, world’s largest supplier of ceramic systems, offers UltraCat Catalytic Ceramic filter systems to remove submicron particulate (PM), SO2, HCl, mercury, heavy metals. Simultaneously the catalytic filters destroy NOx, Cement O-HAPs, dioxins. Ceramic filter tubes have nanobits of catalyst infused in filter walls. Over 90% NOx reduction at 400F. Trinity Consultants/BREEZE. . . . . . . . . . 216 12770 Merit Drive, Suite 900 Dallas, TX 75251 Phone: (972) 661-8100 Fax: (972) 385-9203 http://www.trinityconsultants.com/ [email protected] Trinity Consultants advises on environmental regulations and environmental management. Trinity also provides BREEZE® modeling software, assists with EH&S information management solutions, and provides EH&S professional training and staffing assistance. SafeBridge Consultants, a Trinity Consultants company, provides SH&E services to the life sciences industries. EXHIBITORS BY COMPANY URG Corp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 209 116 S Merritt Mill Road Chapel Hill, NC 27516 Phone: 919-941-2753 Fax: 919-942-3522 http://www.urgcorp.com [email protected] TSI, a world leader in particle measurements, offers a variety of aerosol monitors for real-time, direct-reading results. The new Environmental DustTrak™ measures PM1, PM2.5, respirable, PM10 and total PM size fractions, providing near-reference method quality data. In addition, TSI offers ultrafine particle monitors and nextgeneration lower cost PM2.5 sensors. Ambient Ion Monitor (AIM) for the continuous real-time direct measurements of nitrate, sulfate, nitrite, phosphate, chloride, ammonium, sodium, calcium, potassium, magnesium, hydrogen chloride, nitric acid, sulfur dioxide and ammonia. Teflon coated Cyclones with various cut-points and flow rates, stainless steel cyclones for diesel emissions. Annular Denuder Systems and other Systems. U.S. EPA Air, Climate, Energy Program . . 615 109 T.W. Alexander Drive Durham, NC 27709 http://www.epa.gov/air-research The US EPA’s Air, Climate, and Energy Research Program provides the critical science to develop and implement Clean Air Act regulations that protect the environment and public health. The research puts new tools and information into the hands of air quality managers and regulators to provide solutions to reduce air pollution. U.S. EPA Alumni Association . . . . . . . . . 619 628 Chester River Beach Road Graysonville, MD 21638 Phone: 202-686-3518 www.EPAalumni.org The EPA Alumni Association was formed to provide former EPAers with a place to reconnect or stay connected to colleagues from the Agency. It is open to former employees with a year or more at EPA, or who plan to retire within one year, and has nearly 1,300 members. U.S. EPA Homeland Security Research . . 617 26 West Martin Luther King Drive Cincinnati, OH 45268 Phone: (513) 569-7781 http://www2.epa.gov/ homeland-security-research [email protected] Vapor Point, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 202 1400 South 16th Street LaPorte, TX 77571 Phone: (281) 867-8186 Fax: (281) 942-2214 http://www.vaporpoint.net [email protected] Vapor Point is a specialty engineering and environmental services company that focuses on bringing turnkey solutions to the air quality arena. Systems and services include VOC, H2S, BWON, NESHAP, and degassing of hazardous pollutants. Vapor Point is your partner in air compliance, with solutions for every challenge. VICI Metronics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210 26295 Twelve Trees Poulsbo, WA 98370 Phone: (360) 697-9199 Fax: (360) 697-6682 http://www.vicimetronics.com [email protected] VICI Metronics manufactures permeation tubes and devices to generate stable concentrations of specific chemicals, along with containment traps and gas-specific purifiers. VICI Precision Sampling manufactures a full line of gas and liquid syringes, along with custom-bent and shaped tubing. Both companies offer full lines of metal and polymeric tubing. U.S. EPA’s Homeland Security Research program aims to provide scientific solutions that improve water utilities’ abilities to prepare for and respond to incidents that threaten public health and advance EPA’s capabilities to respond to wide area chemical, biological or radiological contamination incidents, including natural disasters. New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 43 Exhibition TSI Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 430 500 Cardigan Road Shoreview, MN 55126 Phone: 800-874-2811 Fax: 651-490-3824 http://www.tsi.com [email protected] 44 Final Program Sponsored by: West Coast Section New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 45 Technical Program TECHNICAL PROGRAM LETTER FROM THE TECHNICAL PROGRAM CHAIR AND VICE CHAIR Members of the Louisiana Section and Technical Council of the A&WMA have developed an outstanding technical program for the 109th A&WMA Annual Conference and Exhibition (ACE) in New Orleans, Louisiana. The theme for this year’s ACE is “Unmasking the Industrial Renaissance.” This theme was selected to explore the nexus of industrial growth and environmental stewardship. The technical program is designed to bring views and information on air and waste topics of essential interest to a wide spectrum of professionals from industry, regulatory agencies, education, law, consulting companies, equipment manufacturers, and public interest groups. Whether you are a newly hired young professional or a seasoned veteran, if you are looking for opportunities to obtain information on the latest regulations, latest technologies, case studies and activities associated with air modeling, air measurement, permitting, sustainability, waste, environmental and risk management, or many other environmental hot topics, then this year’s A&WMA ACE is the place to find them. Our program starts on Monday afternoon with the Keynote Speaker, Stanley Meiburg, Acting Deputy Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). He will be followed by a Keynote Panel consisting of Kim Greene, CEO of Southern Company; Vickie Patton, General Counsel for the Environmental Defense Fund; and Chuck D. Barlow, VP Environmental, Strategy and Policy, Entergy Corporation. The keynote panel will focus on regulation of the electrical generating industry. The Technical Program continues on Tuesday morning with the 46th Annual Critical Review. The featured speaker for this Presentation is Dr. David T. Allen of the University of Texas at Austin. His presentation is entitled “Emissions from Oil and Gas Operations in the United States and Their Air Quality Implications.” The poster session also occurs on Tuesday morning. Over 100 platform and panel sessions follow on Tuesday afternoon and continue through Thursday afternoon. The Technical Program includes a multi-session Mini-Symposium comprised of a series of platform and panel sessions related to our theme. This symposium provides discussions of recent regulatory developments as well as case studies on permitting. These sessions include discussions of EPA priorities, State Agency concerns, innovative permitting programs, citizen monitoring of air quality, air toxics regulations, recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions, and permitting issues. Sara J. Head, QEP 2016 Technical Program Chair Principal Scientist Yorke Engineering, LLC 46 Final Program This year we are also featuring an Oil and Gas track covering both offshore and onshore air quality programs, management of oil and gas exploration and production waste, midstream environmental issues, hydraulic fracturing, and litigation. The Technical Program also includes tracks covering air quality monitoring, climate change policy, waste management issues, sustainability, air quality modeling, health effects, and case studies in various areas. On Wednesday, a trio of sessions geared to Young Professionals will reprise the popular “What’s That Thang?” from the Louisiana Section. These sessions will feature presentations from various industry and control device professionals discussing how their processes work. These are also popular with seasoned professionals! In addition to the ACE presentations, technical tours and Professional Development Courses are available to enhance your technical repertoire. The technical tours, organized by the Local Host Committee (LHC), include the OxyChem Taft Plant, the Cornerstone Chemical Company Fortier Manufacturing Complex, and the Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans East Bank Wastewater Treatment Plant. Details regarding the technical tours and the Professional Development Courses are provided elsewhere in this Final Program. Of course no technical program can be considered complete if it does not recommend visits with sponsors and exhibitors in the Exhibit Hall. There you will be able to check out the newest products, discuss the latest developments, and observe emerging technologies that are being showcased. You will also be able to interact with colleagues and other experts from the business, scientific, and regulatory communities. We expect attendees for this year’s A&WMA ACE to come from around the world. What better place to showcase the A&WMA than New Orleans, in the heart of the Gulf Coast and home to a vibrant oil and gas industry as well as many chemical and manufacturing facilities. A&WMA’s Technical Council, Staff, the LHC, and others have worked long and hard to make this meeting not only technically sound, but also an enjoyable and memorable experience for you and your families. We hope you take advantage of your opportunities to stroll around the city and are able to enjoy many of the local attractions. We are convinced that you will find this year’s 109th A&WMA ACE an unforgettable experience and that you will enjoy seeing the “new” New Orleans. Laissez les bon temps rouler! Karen Brignac 2016 Technical Program Vice Chair Environmental Compliance Manager PPM Consultants, Inc. TECHNICAL SESSION TRACKS BY TOPIC AREA ACE 2016 Mini-Symposium – Industrial Growth and Environmental Stewardship (MINI) Tue 1:20-1:35 pm Introduction to the Mini-Symposium platform Strand 10A/B Tue 1:35-3:00 pm Innovative Permitting Initiatives panel Strand 10A/B Tue 4:00-6:00 pm EPA Priorities for 2016-2017 panel Strand 10A/B Wed 8:00-9:40 am Citizens Measuring Air Quality: Trends and Implications panel Strand 10A/B Wed 10:20 am-noon Environmental Justice & Permitting Programs panel Strand 10A/B Wed 1:40-3:20 pm NSR Reform: Recent Developments and Issues panel Strand 10A/B Wed 4:00-6:00 pm The Risk Management Plan Modernization Rule - What It Means to Industry panel Strand 10A/B Thu 8:00-9:40 am Permitting in an Ozone Non-Attainment Area platform Strand 10A/B Thu 10:00-11:40 am Air Permitting Problems and Solutions panel Strand 10A/B Thu 1:30-3:10 pm Permitting Case Studies platform Strand 10A/B Thu 3:30-4:50 pm Air Toxics Regulations panel Strand 10A/B Clean Air Act Regulatory Developments platform Strand 13B Wed 10:20 am-noon Clean Power Plan Legal Issues and Litigation Updates panel Strand 13B Wed 1:40-3:20 pm Clean Air Act Compliance Issues platform Strand 13B Wed 4:00-6:00 pm New Source Review Case Studies platform Strand 13B Thu 8:00-9:40 am International Air Quality Issues #1 platform Bolden 2 Thu 8:00-9:40 am ISO 14001:2015 Revision - Implementation Challenges and Experiences panel Bolden 1 Thu 10:00-11:40 am Air Quality Regulatory Issues in Abu Dhabi platform Bolden 2 Thu 1:30-3:10 pm Air Quality Work in Indian Country panel Bolden 6 Thu 3:30-4:50 pm Case Studies in Emission/Energy Reduction Strategies platform Strand 13B Thu 3:30-4:50 pm SILs and SMCs in NSR: What Lies Ahead for PM2.5 and Other Pollutants panel Bolden 5 Air Quality and EHS Regulatory Sessions (REGU) Wed 8:00-9:40 am Oil and Gas Sessions (O&GS) Tue 1:20-3:00 pm Oil & Gas Keynote Panel panel Strand 12B Tue 4:00-6:00 pm Offshore Oil & Gas Air Quality Programs panel Strand 12B Wed 8:00-9:40 am Onshore Oil & Gas Air Quality Testing and Measurements Programs panel Strand 12B Wed 10:20 am-noon EPA/National Air Quality Issues for Oil & Gas Operations panel Strand 12B Wed 1:40-3:20 pm Oil & Gas Operations - Waste and Water Management panel Strand 12B Wed 4:00-6:00 pm Offshore Oil & Gas Environmental Assessments and Compliance panel Strand 12B Thu 8:00-9:40 am Midstream Oil & Gas - Projects & Challenges panel Strand 12B Thu 8:00-9:40 am Refinery Fenceline Monitoring & Data Collection platform Strand 11B Thu 10:00-11:40 am Oil & Gas Hydraulic Fracturing - Environmental Issues panel Strand 12B Thu 1:30-3:10 pm Hot Topics in the Chemical and Refining Industries platform Strand 11B Thu 1:30-3:10 pm Oil & Gas Operations in Wetlands & Other Waters of the U.S. panel Strand 12B Thu 3:30-4:50 pm Emissions Impacts and Control Technologies Related to Oil & Gas Exploration & Production platform Strand 11B Thu 3:30-4:50 pm Oil & Gas Environmental Litigation panel Strand 12B Power Generation and Industrial Sessions (POWR/INDU) Tue 4:00-6:00 pm Regulatory Issues Facing the Electric Power Industry panel Bolden 6 Wed 10:20 am-noon Clean Power Plan Legal Issues and Litigation Updates panel Strand 13B Wed 1:40-3:20 pm Boiler and Engine MACT Implementation platform Bolden 6 Thu 10:00-11:40 am What Direction is EPA taking the Utility Sector? panel Bolden 5 New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 47 Technical Program Industrial Focus Sessions TECHNICAL SESSION TRACKS BY TOPIC AREA Federal Facilities and Indigenous Environmental Affairs Sessions (FEDS) Tue 1:20-3:00 pm DoD Environmental Compliance Issues and Policy platform Bolden 1 Wed 10:20 am-noon Meeting Sustainability Goals for Federal Facilities platform Strand 12A Thu 1:30-3:10 pm Air Quality Work in Indian Country panel Bolden 6 Thu 3:30-4:50 pm Waste Management Work in Indian Country panel Bolden 6 Young Professional Focused Sessions (YPRO) Wed 10:20 am-noon What's That Thang? - Industries - #1 panel Bolden 1 Wed 1:40-3:20 pm What's That Thang? - Industries - #2 panel Bolden 1 Wed 4:00-6:00 pm What's That Thang? - Control Devices panel Bolden 1 Nanoparticle Sessions NANO Thu 1:30-3:10 pm Advances in Nanoscale Science and Engineering and Regulation of Nanotechnology panel Strand 13A Thu 3:30-4:50 pm Nanotechnology Science and Engineering platform Strand 13A platform Bolden 2 Transportation Sessions (TRAN) Tue 1:20-3:00 pm Alternative Vehicles and Modes Tue 4:00-6:00 pm Near Road Air Quality #1 platform Bolden 2 Wed 8:00-9:40 am Community Noise and Vibration/Transportation Modeling Issues platform Bolden 2 Wed 10:20 am-noon Near Road Air Quality #2 platform Bolden 2 Health & Environmental Effects Sessions (H&EE) Tue 1:20-3:00 pm Exposure and Health Effects of Criteria Pollutants platform Strand 13A Tue 4:00-6:00 pm Air Toxics: Exposures and Effects platform Strand 13A Wed 8:00-9:40 am Odor Issues and Solutions platform Strand 13A Wed 1:40-3:20 pm Odor Regulation and Litigation Government and Industry Perspective panel Strand 13A Wed 4:00-6:00 pm Human and Environmental Effects of Air Pollution Exposure platform Strand 11A Wed 4:00-6:00 pm Odor Modeling and Regulation platform Strand 13A Thu 8:00-9:40 am Risk Assessment/Management: Recent Experience platform Strand 13A Climate Change and Adaptation Sessions (CLIM) Tue 1:20-3:00 pm Climate Change Policy Development platform Strand 11A Tue 4:00-6:00 pm A Comprehensive Regional Approach to Addressing GHG Emissions panel Strand 11 Wed 1:40-3:20 pm Climate Change Inventories of Short-Lived Pollutants platform Strand 11A Thu 8:00-9:40 am Future Proofing Cities through Local Climate Action Planning panel Strand 11A Air Quality Control Technology Sessions (AQCT) Wed 8:00-9:40 am Mercury Emission Control Techniques platform Bolden 5 Wed 10:20 am-noon Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Control Technologies and Strategies platform Bolden 5 Wed 4:00-6:00 pm Biofiltration and Other Methods for Air Pollution Control platform Strand 12A Wed 4:00-6:00 pm What's That Thang? - Control Devices panel Bolden 1 Thu 8:00-9:40 am Air Pollution Control Technologies panel Strand 13B Thu 10:00-11:40 am Air Pollution Control Applications platform Strand 13B Thu 3:30-4:50 pm Control of Dust, Odor, and Indoor Air Pollution platform Strand 11A Air Quality Emissions Studies Sessions (AQES) Wed 8:00-9:40 am Ongoing Technical Challenges Addressing the Visibility Goal panel Bolden 1 Wed 1:40-3:20 pm Emission Factor Development #1 platform Bolden 2 Wed 4:00-6:00 pm Emission Factor Development #2 platform Bolden 2 Thu 10:00-11:40 am Fugitive Dust platform Bolden 1 48 Final Program Air Quality Measurements and Monitoring (AQMM) Development of Air Quality Monitoring Techniques platform Bolden 5 Tue 1:20-3:00 pm Next Generation Techniques for Emission Measurements & Quantification platform Strand 11B Tue 4:00-6:00 pm Fenceline and Fugitive Emissions Measurement Using Optical Remote Sensing Techniques platform Strand 11B Wed 8:00-9:40 am Providing Air Quality Data to the Public platform Strand 11B Wed 10:20 am-noon Next Generation of Air Monitoring Tools for Fugitive Fenceline & Area Source Applications platform Strand 11B Wed 1:40-3:20 pm Fenceline Monitoring Case Studies platform Strand 11B Wed 1:40-3:20 pm Particulate Matter - Methods, Speciation & Analysis #1 platform Bolden 5 Wed 4:00-6:00 pm Measurement of Emissions from Industrial Point Sources platform Strand 11B Wed 4:00-6:00 pm Particulate Matter - Methods, Speciation & Analysis #2 platform Bolden 5 Thu 8:00-9:40 am Refinery Fenceline Monitoring & Data Collection platform Strand 11B Thu 10:00-11:40 am NASA's Satellite and Sub-Orbital Measurements and Models to Address Air Quality and Health Applications panel Strand 11B Thu 1:30-3:10 pm International Air Quality Issues #2 platform Bolden 2 Air Quality Modeling Sessions (AQMO) Tue 1:20-3:00 pm Atmospheric Deposition platform Strand 13B Tue 4:00-6:00 pm AERMOD Technical Issues platform Bolden 5 Tue 4:00-6:00 pm Atmospheric Chemistry platform Strand 13B Wed 8:00-9:40 am Innovative Modeling Techniques platform Strand 11A Wed 10:20 am-noon NO2 and Air Toxics Modeling Case Studies platform Strand 11A Thu 8:00-9:40 am Data Requirements Rule and Attainment Modeling platform Bolden 5 Thu 1:30-3:10 pm Particulate and Photochemical Modeling Issues and Studies platform Bolden 5 Thu 3:30-4:50 pm SILs and SMCs in NSR: What Lies Ahead for PM2.5 and Other Pollutants panel Bolden 5 platform Strand 12A Sustainability and Resource Conservation Sessions (SUST) Tue 1:20-3:00 pm Recycling, Take-Back, and Diversion Programs - Case Studies, Issues and Perspectives Tue 4:00-6:00 pm Life Cycle Approaches to Sustainable Material and Resource Management platform Strand 12A Wed 8:00-9:40 am Local Approaches to Zero-Waste and Sustainability Challenges panel Strand 12A Wed 10:20 am-noon Meeting Sustainability Goals for Federal Facilities platform Strand 12A Wed 1:40-3:20 pm Sustainability Management platform Strand 12A Thu 10:00-11:40 am Sustainability Fundamentals Principles Standards Models Metrics and Practice panel Strand 11A Waste Management Sessions (WAST) Tue 1:20-3:00 pm Solid Waste Planning, Collection, and Landfills platform Bolden 6 Wed 8:00-9:40 am Wed 10:20 am-noon Solid and Liquid Biofuels platform Bolden 6 Thermal Treatment Technologies and Waste Management platform Bolden 6 Wed 1:40-3:20 pm Oil & Gas Operations - Waste and Water Management panel Strand 12B Wed 4:00-6:00 pm Wastewater/Residuals Beneficial Use, Treatment and Management platform Bolden 6 Thu 8:00-9:40 am Vapor Intrusion and Regulatory Issues in Site Management platform Bolden 6 Thu 10:00-11:40 am Site Remediation - Groundwater, Soil and Sediment platform Bolden 6 Thu 3:30-4:50 pm Waste Management Work in Indian Country panel Bolden 6 A&WMA Environmental Education Resource Guides (EERG) Train-the-Trainer Workshop panel Strand 13B Education (EDUC) Thu 1:30-3:10 pm New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 49 Technical Program Tue 1:20-3:00 pm Conference Information TECHNICAL SESSION TRACKS BY TOPIC AREA TECHNICAL SESSIONS – TUESDAY DAILY SCHEDULE Tuesday, June 21, 2016 Time Title 9:00 am-5:00 pm Exhibition Track Session Type Elite Hall Room 9:00-11:45 am Critical Review Empire Ballroom BCD 10:00-11:45 am Technical Poster Session Storyville Hall 11:45 am-1:15 pm Technical Coordinating Committee Meetings Tech Session Rooms 1:20-3:00 pm Innovative Permitting Initiatives MINI panel Strand 10A/B 1:20-3:00 pm Development of Air Quality Monitoring Techniques AQMM platform Bolden 5 1:20-3:00 pm Next Generation Techniques for Emission Measurements & Quantification AQMM platform Strand 11B 1:20-3:00 pm Atmospheric Deposition AQMO platform Strand 13B 1:20-3:00 pm Climate Change Policy Development CLIM platform Strand 11A 1:20-3:00 pm DoD Environmental Compliance Issues and Policy FEDS platform Bolden 1 1:20-3:00 pm Exposure and Health Effects of Criteria Pollutants H&EE platform Strand 13A 1:20-3:00 pm Oil & Gas Keynote Panel O&GS panel Strand 12B 1:20-3:20 pm Recycling, Take-Back, and Diversion Programs - Case Studies, SUST platform Strand 12A (See Page 15) Issues and Perspectives 1:20-3:00 pm Alternative Vehicles and Modes TRAN platform Bolden 2 1:20-3:20 pm Solid Waste Planning, Collection, and Landfills WAST platform Bolden 6 3:00-4:00 pm Session Break 4:00-6:00 pm EPA Priorities for 2016-2017 MINI panel Strand 10A/B 4:00-6:00 pm Fenceline and Fugitive Emissions Measurement Using Optical Remote AQMM platform Strand 11B Sensing Techniques 4:00-6:00 pm AERMOD Technical Issues AQMO platform Bolden 5 4:00-6:00 pm Atmospheric Chemistry AQMO platform Strand 13B A Comprehensive Regional Approach to Addressing Greenhouse CLIM panel Strand 11A platform Strand 13A 4:00-6:00 pm Gas Emissions 4:00-6:00 pm Air Toxics: Exposures and Effects H&EE 4:00-6:00 pm Offshore Oil & Gas Air Quality Programs O&GS panel Strand 12B 4:00-6:00 pm Regulatory Issues Facing the Electric Power Industry POWR panel Bolden 6 4:00-6:00 pm Near Road Air Quality #1 TRAN platform Bolden 2 4:00-6:00 pm Life Cycle Approaches to Sustainable Material and Resource Management SUST platform Strand 12A Legend Tracks Tracks AQCT Air Quality Control Technology MINI Mini-Symposium AQES Air Quality Emissions Studies NANO Nanoparticles AQMM Air Quality Measurements and Monitoring O&GS Oil & Gas AQMO Air Quality Modeling POWR Power Generation CLIM Climate Change REGU Regulatory EDUC Education SUST Sustainability and Resource Conservation FEDS Federal, Public Sectors and Tribal TRAN Transportation H&EE Health and Environmental Effects WAST Waste Management INDU Heavy Industry and General Manufacturing YPRO Young Professionals 50 Final Program TECHNICAL SESSIONS 46th Annual Critical Review Air Quality Modeling and Chemistry Emissions from Oil and Gas Operations in the United States and their Air Quality Implications Author and Presenter: David T. Allen, Director of the Center for Energy and Environmental Resources at the University of Texas at Austin Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 9:00 AM – 11:45 AM Empire Ballroom BCD Inverse Modeling to Estimate Local Source Contributions in a Complex Environment with Nearby Port Airport Highway and Industrial Sources Paper# 889 Gayle Hagler and Daniel P. Birkett, EPA; Ronald Henry, University of Southern California; Richard Peltier and Pallavi Pant, University of Massachusetts-Amherst; Eben Thoma and Gary Norris, EPA Modeling of Cement Factory Air Pollution Dispersion by AERMOD Case Study of Abyek Iran Paper#: 1276 Mohammad Nayeb Yazdi, Sharif University of Technology, Iran; Maryam Delavarrafiee, North Carolina State University; Mehdi ketabchy, Virginia Tech; Mohammad Arhami, Sharif University of Technology, Iran TECHNICAL POSTERS Sponsored by Arcadis Tuesday, June 21, 2016 Ambient Monitoring and Measurements Influences of the Short-Term Air Pollution Episode on Ambient Levels of PM2.5 Black Carbon and Particle Number during the Beehive Fireworks Display at a Lantern Festival in Southern Taiwan Paper# 841 Yu-Hsiang Cheng, Li-Sing Yang, Chung-Wen Liao, and Yu-Yun Kao, Ming Chi University of Technology, Taiwan Air Emissions Quantification Real-Time Geospatial Data Viewer RETIGO Web-Based Tool for Researchers and Citizen Scientists to Explore their Air Measurements Paper# 983 Gayle Hagler, EPA; Matt Freeman, Lockheed Martin; Marie O'Shea and Jon Gabry, EPA Region 2; Illah Nourbakhsh, Chris Bartley, and Randy Sargent, Carnegie Mellon University; Heidi Paulsen, EPA OEI The Effects of the Degree of Unsaturation of Various Biodiesel Feedstocks on CO and CO2 Emissions from Low-Temperature Combustion Paper# 816 Hamid Omidvarborna, Ashok Kumar, and Dong-Shik Kim, The University of Toledo Application of Stochastic Simulation Algorithms (SSA) to NOx Emissions from Combustion of Simplified Biodiesel Surrogate Fuel in Low-Temperature Combustion (LTC) Paper# 817 Hamid Omidvarborna, Ashok Kumar, and Dong-Shik Kim, The University of Toledo The Development of a Novel Method for the Gravimetric Preparation of a Multicomponent Volatile Organic Compound Gas Mixture Standard, Paper# 1028 Cassie A Goodman and George C. Rhoderick, NIST Methane Generation During Swine Manure Windrows: A Case Study Paper# 1121 Nanh Lovanh, USDA-ARS; John Hudson Loughrin, Food Animal Environmental Systems Research Unit; Kimberly Cook, Philip J. Silva, and Karamat Sistani, USDA-ARS Seasonal and Spatial Variability of Urban and Rural PM2.5 Speciated Aerosol Composition Data from the IMPROVE and CSN Networks. Paper# 1130 Jenny Hand and Bill Malm, Colorado State University; Bret Schichtel, National Park Service Understanding Production of Soil Nitrogen Oxide and Its Effect on Regional Air Quality Paper#: 1183 Quazi Rasool, Rui Zhang, and Daniel Cohan, Rice University CASTNET Small Footprint Filter Pack Only Sites Paper# 1229 Christopher Rogers and Selma Isil, Amec Foster Wheeler Environment Infrastructure Inc.; Ralph Baumgardner, EPA; H. Kemp Howell and Kevin Mishoe, Amec Foster Wheeler Environment Infrastruture Inc. New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 51 Technical Program 10:00 AM – 11:45 AM Chair: David Minott, Arc5 Environmental Consulting, LLC Technical Poster Area: Storyville Hall (including the Technical Poster Presentation Room) Note: Following the Poster Session, posters remain available for viewing through Thursday morning. TECHNICAL POSTERS Indoor Air Quality Energy Management Predicting Indoor Vapor Concentrations After Use of a Volatile and Reactive Disinfectant Paper# 828 David McCready, EnviroCalc PLLC Energy Sustainability Through Implementation of ISO 50001 – Energy Management System Paper# 1144 Donna Laflamme-McGuire, Wayne Duke, Rob Geiman, Gavin Hall, Phil Huynh, and Toni Monte, Medtronic Tempe Campus An Analysis of Air Filter Media by Introducing the Effective Leakage Area Method Paper# 1249 Heekwan Lee, Jonghung Park and Rajib Pokhrel, Incheon National University, South Korea Landfill Issues Impact Assessment of Thermal Environment on the Academic Attention in a Classroom Paper# 1251 Heekwan Lee, Jiwon Jeong and Rajib Pokhrel, Incheon National University, South Korea Utilization of Aluminum Dross Residue Waste in the Fabrication of Ceramic Tiles Paper# 932 Pat Sooksaen, Silpakorn University, Thailand; Pathompong Puathawee, Smooth International Company, Ltd. Health Risk Assessment A Field Comparison of Landfill Leachates with Varied Waste Composition Paper# 1280 Chris Moody, University of Florida Risk Assessment for Denatured Ethanol Spills into a River Paper# 829 David McCready, EnviroCalc PLLC; John Carbone, Ecotoxicology and Environmental Risk Assessment Consulting LLC A Study of Ecotoxicity of Nanoparticles, Their Usage and End of Life Disposal Paper# 1074 Sakib Pathan and Ashok Kumar, The University of Toledo A Quantitative ADME-based Tool for Exploring Human Exposure to Consumer Product Ingredients Paper# 1134 Peter P. Egeghy, EPA ORD; Michael-Rock Goldsmith, Chemical Computing Group; Cara Henning, Tao Hong, and Heidi Hubbard, ICF International; Daniel A. Vallero, EPA ORD Transportation Emissions and Impacts Fuel Economy and Well-to-Wheels GHG Emissions from Bi-fuel LPG Vehicles Paper# 1044 Andrew J. Burnham and Walter A. Schaefer, Argonne National Laboratory; Christie-Joy B. Hartman, James Madison University; Alleyn Harned and Matthew Wade, Virginia Clean Cities 52 Final Program Hazardous Waste & Wastewater Treatment and Beneficial Use Applying Activated Carbonsilver Catalyst with Ozonation to Decompose Wastewater of Tetra-Methyl Ammonium Hydroxide (TMAH) Paper# 998 Li-Wei Lu, Cheng-Nan Chang, WenChih Hsu, and Ho-Wen Chen, Tunghai University Environmental Science Engineering, Taiwan Removal of 2, 4-Dinitrotoluene and 2, 4-Dichlorophenol with Zero-Valent Iron-Embedded Biochar Paper# 1099 Seok-Young Oh and Yong-Deuk Seo, University of Ulsan, South Korea ^ƚƵĚĞŶƚͬŝ WŽƐƚĞƌƐ ENTRANCE 1251 1144 1134 Open 1183 1280 1074 817 1121 932 829 816 1229 1028 1099 1249 1130 983 1044 998 828 Open 841 1276 889 7HFKQLFDO3RVWHUV Tuesday, June 21 WƌĞƐĞŶƚĂƚŝŽŶƐ ĂŶĚ ^ƚƵĚĞŶƚǀĞŶƚƐ Technical Program 7HFKQLFDO3RVWHU TECHNICAL POSTERS DISPLAY GUIDE New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 53 TECHNICAL SESSIONS – TUESDAY, JUNE 21 Innovative Permitting Initiatives Mini-Symposium Room: Strand 10A/B Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 1:20 PM Panel – TCC: REG1 Chair: Chris Nelson, 3M Company Vice Chair: John Koehler, Yorke Engineering, LLC 1:20 PM Overview of 2016 Mini-Symposium Industrial Growth and Environmental Stewardship Paper# 1252 John Koehler, Yorke Engineering LLC 1:35 PM Panel Session - Innovative Permitting Initiatives In September 2009, EPA finalized a rule that promoted the use of flexible air permits that would “facilitate flexible, marketresponsive operations at an industrial facility while ensuring equal or greater environmental protection than conventional air permits.” While some States are issuing formal “Flex Permits,” many States are taking different and innovative approaches to ensure positive environmental outcomes while finding process efficiencies. Panelists will describe specific State programs or projects that successfully promoted compliance and efficiency. Ms. Stepp will outline Wisconsin’s Green Tier program, which allows companies with good performance records to pioneer regulatory reforms or innovative approaches. Green Tier sites often implement pollution prevention projects and work closely with their communities under the program. Mr. Smith will discuss the “sector approach” of the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) to multimedia permitting, which provides a single point of contact for complex projects in order to facilitate environmental protection and permit timeliness. He will also cover other MPCA innovative initiatives. Mr. Willing will highlight a recent cooperative project between 3M and the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency that allowed 3M to write the renewed Title V permit for a complex 3M facility. The approach saved agency resources, facilitated permit flexibility and clarity, and improved the enforceability of the renewed permit. Panelists: • Cathy Stepp, Secretary, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources • Jeff Smith, Director, Industrial Division, MPCA • Andrew Willing, 3M Company Development of Air Quality Monitoring Techniques Track: AQMM Room: Bolden 5 Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 1:20 PM Platform – TCC: AAM1 Chair: Rick Osa, ERM 1:20 PM Hourly Photochemical Assessment Monitoring Station PAMS Monitoring of NMHCs by AutoGC: A Practical Approach to Automation and Quality Control Paper# 941 Carol Meyer, Orsat LLC 1:40 PM Development of a Characterization Chamber for Testing Low-Cost Air Quality Sensors under Controlled Environmental Conditions Paper# 1029 Andrea Polidori, Vasileios Papapostolou, Brandon Feenstra, Hang Zhang, and Laki Tisopulos, SCAQMD 2:00 PM Development of a Wireless Air Quality Sensor Network for Monitoring PM Emissions from a Waste Disposal and Recycling Facility Paper# 1030 Andrea Polidori, Laki Tisopulos, Brandon Feenstra, Jeremy Pathmanabhan, and Vasileios Papapostolou, SCAQMD 2:20 PM Integration of Innovative Materials and Methods in Ambient Air Quality Monitoring Paper# 1186 Abhinay Jilla, Bhaskar Kura, and Poojitha Aleti, University of New Orleans; Aamani Kura, Louisiana State University / Marathon Petroleum Corporation; Arielle Authement and Lindsey Foster, University of New Orleans Next Generation Techniques for Emission Measurements & Quantification Track: AQMM Room: Strand 11B Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 1:20 PM Platform – TCC: AAM2 Chair: Praveen Srirama, CEMRC Vice Chair: Eduardo Olaguer, HARC 1:20 PM Monitoring of Volatile Organic Compounds in Urban and Rural Tropical Environments Paper# 976 Damien Bazin, Jean-Philippe Amiet, Michel Robert, Franck Amiet, Chromatotec, Inc; Seth Chloran, Consolidated Analytical System 54 Final Program TECHNICAL SESSIONS 1:40 PM Use of a Multi-Wavelength Integrating Nephelometer to Determine Source Influences on Particle Concentration Measurements Paper# 1256 Herbert Schloesser, American Ecotech L.C. 2:00 PM Real-Time FTIR Monitoring of Parts Per Trillion Level Vapors and/or Molecular Contaminations Paper# 835 Curtis T Laush, Geosyntec 2:20 PM Remote Quantification of Stack Emissions from Marine Vessels Paper# 944 Johan Mellqvist, Jorg Beecken, Johan Ekholm, Chalmers University of Technology; Jerker Samuelsson, Marianne Ericsson, FluxSense Inc; Laki Tisopulos, Andrea Polidori, Olga Pikelnaya, SCAQMD Climate Change Policy Development Track: CLIM Room: Strand 11A Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 1:20 PM Platform – TCC: CCP1 Chair: Sardar Hassan, Department of Defense Vice Chair: Miriam Levon, The LEVON Group, LLC 1:20 PM Is There an Energy Policy That Takes Advantage of New Fossil Resources Yet Still Meets Climate Change Goals? Paper# 879 Jane Besch, Geosyntec Consultants 1:40 PM Navigating the Complex Web of GHG Inventory Methods Regulatory-Voluntary Paper# 1075 Michael Conrardy, AECOM Track: AQMO Room: Strand 13B Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 1:20 PM Platform – TCC: APC1 Chair: Yi Li, Colorado State University Vice Chair: Christopher Rogers, AMEC Foster Wheeler Environment & Infrastructure 1:20 PM The Increasing Importance of Deposition of Reduced Nitrogen in the United States Paper# 1107 Yi Li, Colorado State University: Bret Schichtel, National Park Service; John Walker, Donna Schwede and Xi Chen, EPA; Christopher Lehmann, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign; Melissa Puchalski, EPA; David Gay, University of Illinois UrbanaChampaign; Jeffrey Collett, Jr., Colorado State University 2:00 PM Clean Power Plan Across State Lines: Understanding Regional Opportunities and Challenges Paper# 1056 Tree Raine, Robert Fraser and Carlos Szembek, ERM 1:40 PM Climate Policy Impact on Nitrogen Deposition in the USA Paper# 1045 Colleen Baublitz and Barron Henderson, University of Florida; Daven Henze and Hyung Min Lee, University of Colorado at Boulder; Daniel Loughlin and Chris Nolte, EPA; Fabien Paulot, University of Colorado New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 55 Tuesday, June 21 Atmospheric Deposition 2:20 PM Assessment of Annual and Seasonal Fluxes of Particulate Matter from Atmospheric Deposition to Lake Tahoe Paper# 1120 L.-W. Antony Chen, University of Las Vegas; Anna Y.-C. Tai, Xiaoliang Wang, Judith Chow and John Watson, Desert Research Institute Technical Program 2:40 PM Quantification of Gaseous Emissions from Gas Stations, Oil Wells and Agriculture Using Optical Solar Occultation Flux and Tracer Correlation Methods Paper# 947 Johan Mellqvist, Jerker Samuelsson, Marianne Ericsson, Samuel Brohede, Pontus Andersson, John Johansson, Oscar Isoz, FluxSense, Inc; Laki Tisopulos, Andrea Polidori, Olga Pikelnaya, SCAQMD 2:00 PM Total Deposition at Clingmans Dome, TN in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park Paper# 1230 Christopher Rogers and Selma Isil, Amec Foster Wheeler Environment Infrastructure; Thomas Lavery, consultant; Kristi Gebhart, National Park Service TECHNICAL SESSIONS DoD Environmental Compliance Issues and Policy Track: FEDS Room: Bolden 1 Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 1:20 PM Platform – TCC: FED1 Chair: Francisco Castaneda, III, HQ Air Force Civil Engineer Center Vice Chair: Sardar Hassan, Department of Defense 1:20 PM A Case Study in Distributed Multi-Tiered Enterprise Environmental Compliance Assessment in the Air Force Paper# 813 Brent K Allred, Northrop Grumman Information Systems; Francisco Castaneda, HQ Air Force Civil Engineer Center 1:40 PM Automation of RICE NESHAP Compliance in the U.S. Air Force Paper# 877 Stuart Wallace, AECOM 2:00 PM Avoiding Pitfalls When Conducting Dispersion Modeling at Government Facilities Paper# 1036 Roger Wayson, Wyle Aerospace; Brian Y. Kim, Wyle Inc.; Kazumi Nakada, Wyle Aerospace; Francisco Castaneda, HQ Air Force Civil Engineer Center 2:20 PM Development of the Puff Model for Airport Air Quality PMAAQ Paper# 1119 Brian Kim, Kazumi Nakada, Ben Manning and Roger Wayson, Wyle Inc. 2:40 PM Laughlin Air Force Base Case Study Streamlining APIMS Data Entry Paper# 1071 Maria Gutierrez, DoD 56 Final Program Exposure and Health Effects of Criteria Pollutants Track: H&EE Room: Strand 13A Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 1:20 PM Platform – TCC: HEE1 Chair: J.W. Morrow Vice Chair: Suresh Santanam, SU-Industrial Assessment Center 1:20 PM PM2.5 and Ozone-Related Health Impacts in a Changing Climate Paper# 1234 Joshua Fu, Jian Sun and Xiufen Xhu, University of Tennessee 1:40 PM Air Pollutant Mitigation Strategies to Reduce Health Impacts: An Application in Detroit, MI Paper# 898 Sheena Martenies, Chad Milando and Stuart Batterman, University of Michigan, School of Public Health 2:00 PM Characterization of Traffic Emissions Exposure Metrics in an Urban Area Paper# 1077 Jennifer L. Moutinho, Rodney J. Weber, and Armistead G. Russell, Georgia Institute of Technology; Donghai Liang, Chandresh Ladva, Dean Jones, Stefanie Ebelt Sarnat, and Jeremy A. Sarnat, Emory University; Karoline Johnson, Duke University; Rachel Golan, Ben Gurion University; Ruby Greenwald, Georgia State University; Vishal Verma, University of Illinois 2:20 PM FROG-4000 Portable Gas Chromatograph: Applications in Ambient Air Quality Monitoring Paper# 1180 Lindsey Foster, Poojitha Aleti, Abhinay Jilla, and Bhaskar Kura, University of New Orleans; Aamani Kura, Louisiana State University / Marathon Petroleum Company TECHNICAL SESSIONS Oil & Gas Keynote Panel Track: O&GS Room: Strand 12B Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 1:20 PM Panel – TCC: CHE1 Chair: Michael Waguespack, Waldemar S. Nelson Vice Chair: Richard Leonhard, Project Consulting Services, Inc. This keynote panel will kick off the ten panel sessions that are the oil & gas track. The panelists will include the leaders from two Federal agencies, two State agencies and an environmental interest group. This panel will provide a high level overview of the current environmental issues and challenges for the oil & gas exploration and production (E&P) industry in the U.S. The topics include: • EPA enforcement initiatives for the oil & gas industry • Environmental programs in the offshore waters of U.S. These topics relate to various aspects of oil & gas E&P operations. The presentations will provide timely information on the regulatory framework associated with these operations. Panelists: 2:20 PM Value Creation by Sustainable Manufacturing Paper# 810 Matthew Franchetti, Behin Elahi and Somik Ghose, The University of Toledo 2:40 PM The Determination of Sorting Efficiency of Cardboard Disc Screen in Waste Paper Processing Paper# 1246 Arash Razaee and Thomas Pretz, RWTH 3:00 PM Efficient Data Management is Critical to Measuring Success Paper# 839 Rick Penner, Re-TRAC Connect • John Blevins, EPA Region 6 • Mike Celata, Gulf of Mexico OCS Region, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management Alternative Vehicles and Modes Track: TRAN Room: Bolden 2 • Adam Babich, Tulane Environmental Law Clinic • Chuck Carr Brown, Louisiana DEQ (invited) Recycling, Take-Back, and Diversion Programs Case Studies, Issues and Perspectives Track: SUST Room: Strand 12A Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 1:20 PM Platform – TCC: SRC1 Chair: Sam Vigil, California Polytechnic University San Luis Obispo Vice Chair: Ning Ai, University of Illinois at Chicago Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 1:20 PM Platform – TCC: OMS1 Chair: Shauna Hallmark, Iowa State University 1:20 PM Climate-Stabilizing California Light-Duty Vehicle Requirements Versus Air Resource Board Goals Paper# 881 Michael Ross Bullock, San Diego County Democratic Party Central Committee 1:40 PM Procedure for Real-World Measurement and Data Analysis of a Flex Fuel Vehicle Operated on E85 Paper# 954 Maryam Delavarrafiee and H. Christopher Frey, North Carolina State University New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 57 Tuesday, June 21 • Thomas F. Harris, Louisiana Department of Natural Resources 1:20 PM A Comparison of Recycling Rates Between Different Building Units at an Urban University Paper# 1143 Cynthia Klein-Banai, Karima Patel and Wasif Ahmad, University of Illinois at Chicago 2:00 PM Environmental Permitting System for the Waste Management Sector in Abu Dhabi Paper# 988 Fadi Elayyan, Hani Abdalla, Keith Weitz, and Jesse Baskir, RTI International; Maha Al Yafei, Environment Agency - Abu Dhabi; Fatimah Al Harmoudi, Center of Waste Management Technical Program • State regulatory programs 1:40 PM Student Innovations Toward Zero Waste at California Polytechnic University San Luis Obispo Campus Paper# 951 Rebekah Oulton, California Polytechnic University San Luis Obispo TECHNICAL SESSIONS 2:00 PM Air Pollution Emissions Reduction by the Operation of the J Aerial Cableway Line Powered by Electric Energy as Part of the SITVA (Spanish: Sistema Integrado de Transporte del Valle del Aburr or Aburr Valley Integrated Transportation System) Paper# 1063 Santiago Gomez, Esteban Echeverri, Edgar Alejandro Velez, Alejandra Quinchia and Oscar Duque, Evaluacion y Control Ambiental S.A.S. 2:20 PM Assessing Emissions Impacts of Automated Vehicles Paper# 1105 George Noel, Erin Reed, Scott Smith and Hannah Rakoff, USDOT Volpe Center 2:40 PM Effect of Lane Closure on Vehicle Trajectories and Emissions: Simulation and Real-World Evaluation Paper# 1209 Shams Tanvir, Institute for Transportation Research and Education; Martin Hartmann, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology; Nagui Rouphail, Institute for Transportation Research and Education; Bastian Schroeder, Kittelson & Associates Inc. Solid Waste Planning, Collection, and Landfills Track: WAST Room: Bolden 6 Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 1:20 PM Platform – TCC: WMB1 Chair: David Greene, SCS Engineers Vice Chair: Melanie Sattler, University of Texas at Arlington 1:20 PM Greenbox – A Novel Community-Based Food Waste-toEnergy Collection System Paper# 811 Matthew Franchetti, The University of Toledo 1:40 PM Solid Waste Management in Mongolia: Challenges and Opportunities Paper# 963 Enkhdul Tuuguu, Tseren Ganbaatar, Sarantuya Jijigdsuren, and Nergui Jargal, National University of Mongolia 2:00 PM Preliminary Investigation of Coal Class F Fly Ash as a Final Landfill Cover to Reduce Methane Emissions Paper# 832 Melanie Sattler, Sharon Priyadarshini, Laalithya Bondili, Amin Homaei, Niloofar Parsaeifard, Fatemeh Khalaj, Arpita Bhatt, and Paul Shover, University of Texas at Arlington 2:20 PM Differential Absorption Lidar DIAL Measurements of Landfill Methane Emissions Paper# 931 Fabrizio Innocenti, Rod Robinson, Tom Gardiner, Andrew Finlayson, Andy Connor, and Jess Few, National Physical Laboratory 2:40 PM Effect of Termite Hindgut Microbe Tav5 on Methane Production from Municipal Solid Waste Degradation Paper# 880 Hoda Rahimi and Melanie Sattler, University of Texas at Arlington 3:00 PM Innovative Landfill Leachate Management Paper# 896 Leah Blinn and Russ Keckler, CB&I EPA Priorities for 2016-2017 Track: Mini-Symposium Room: Strand 10A/B Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 4:00 PM Panel – TCC: REG2 Chair: David Jordan, ERM As we approach the end of the Obama Administration, EPA is continuing its work on a number of important regulatory initiatives under the Clean Air Act. In 2015, EPA completed rulemaking to control greenhouse gas emissions from both new and existing electric utility generating plants. A number of legal challenges have been filed against these rules, and many States have indicated they do not intend to implement the rules regardless of the outcome of legal challenges to the rules. Mr. Raj Rao from EPA's Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards (OAQPS) will provide an update of the status of these standards and EPA’s next steps in the regulatory process. Mr. Rao will provide a broad discussion of other climate policy initiatives, including new regulations on the control of methane emissions. EPA’s ongoing review of National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) is expected to continue to be a priority for EPA, with attention focused on implementing the 2015 revised ozone NAAQS. Implementation guidance for the revised ozone NAAQS is expected from EPA as States gather air quality data necessary for designations under the new standards. EPA continues to work with States on achieving compliance with revised NAAQS standards for sulfur dioxide and PM2.5. 58 Final Program TECHNICAL SESSIONS Although rulemaking for Maximum Achievable Control Technology (MACT) standards for hazardous air pollutants from most source categories have been implemented, potential revisions to certain of these standards are being considered by EPA as a part of its residual risk evaluations. The panel will provide insights into EPA’s current regulatory priorities on these and other topics with feedback from State/local regulators, and industry on these initiatives. Panelists: • Raj Rao, EPA OAQPS (invited) • Donald Trahan, Louisiana DEQ 4:40 PM Use of Multiple Optical Remote Sensing Techniques to Quantify Gaseous Emissions from Urban Oil Wells, Storage Tanks and Other Small Point Sources Paper# 1021 Andrea Polidori, Olga Pikelnaya, and Lake Tisopulos, SCAQMD; Johan Magnus Mellqvist, Chalmers University of Technology; Jerker Samuelsson, Marianne Ericsson, John Johansson, Samuel Brohede, Oscar Izos, and Pontus Samuelsson, Fluxsense Inc.; Rod Alan Robinson, Fabrizio Innocenti and Andrew Finlayson, National Physical Laboratory; Stephen Howard Perry, KASSAY Field Services, Inc.; Timothy Minnich and Robert Scotto, Minnich and Scotto, Inc. Fenceline and Fugitive Emissions Measurement Using Optical Remote Sensing Techniques Track: AQMM Room: Strand 11B Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 4:00 PM Platform – TCC: AAM3 Chair: Andrea Polidori, SCAQMD Vice Chair: Laki Tisopulos, SCAQMD 4:20 PM Controlled-release Experiment to Validate Field Measurements from Different Optical Remote Sensing Techniques Paper# 1013 Andrea Polidori, Olga Pikelnaya, and Laki Tisopulos, SCAQMD; Johan Magnus Mellqvist, Chalmers University of Technology; Jerker Samuelsson and Marianne Ericsson, FluxSense Inc; Rod Alan Robinson, Fabrizio Innocenti, and Andrew Finlayson, National Physical Laboratory; Ram Hashmonay and Omri Hashmonay, Atmosfir Optic Ltd. 5:40 PM Use of the Adaptive Background Filtering ABF Algorithm to Improve Analysis Of Open Path FTIR Gaseous Emissions Spectra Collected from Urban Oil Wells, Storage Tanks and Other Small Point Sources Paper# 996 Stephen H. Perry, KASSAY Field Services Inc.; Olga Pikelnaya, Laki Tisopulos, and Andrea Polidori, SCAQMD; Robert Kricks, RJK Consulting New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 59 Tuesday, June 21 4:00 PM Monitoring of Emissions from a Large Petrochemical Facility Using a Combination of Optical Remote Sensing Techniques Paper# 1006 Andrea Polidori, Olga Pikelnaya, and Laki Tisopulos, SCAQMD; Johan Magnus Mellqvist, Chalmers University of Technology; Jerker Samuelsson and Marianne Ericsson, FluxSense Inc; Rod Alan Robinson, Fabrizio Innocenti, and Andrew Finlayson, National Physical Laboratory; Ram Hashmonay and Omri Hashmonay, Atmosfir Optic Ltd. 5:20 PM The Role of Continuous Open Path FTIR Fenceline Monitoring for Estimation of Total Fugitive Emissions from a Large Refinery Paper# 1086 Ram Hashmonay, Atmosfir Optic Ltd.; Gilad Shpitzer, A.S. Research Services Ltd.; Robert Kagann, Atmosfir; Omri Hashmonay, Atmosfir Optics; Andrea Polidori, Olga Pikelnaya, and Laki Tisopulos, SCAQMD Technical Program 5:00 PM Using Solar Occultation Flux and Other Optical Remote Sensing Techniques to Fully Characterize and Quantify Fugitive Emissions from Refineries and Oil Depots Paper# 948 Johan Mellqvist, Jerker Samuelsson, Marianne Ericsson, Samuel Brohede, Pontus Andersson, John Johansson, and Oscar Isoz, FluxSense Inc.; Laki Tisopulos, Andrea Polidori, and Olga Pikelnaya, SCAQMD • Henry Graham, Louisiana Chemical Association (invited) TECHNICAL SESSIONS AERMOD Technical Issues Atmospheric Chemistry Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 4:00 PM Platform – TCC: APM1 Chair: Justin Walters, Southern Company Vice Chair: George Schewe, Trinity Consultants Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 4:00 PM Platform – TCC: APC2 Chair: Philip Silva, USDA-ARS Vice Chair: Randal Martin, Utah State University, CEE 4:00 PM Air Permit Modeling - Where Do We Stand? Paper# 906 Gale Hoffnagle, TRC Environmental Corporation 4:00 PM An Overview of the 2015 Great Salt Lake Summer Ozone Study Paper# 1033 Randal Martin, Utah State University CEE UWRL; John Horel, Erik Crossman, Alex Jacques, Brian Blaylock, and Ansley Long, University of Utah; Seth Arens, Utah Division of Air Quality Air Monitoring Center; John Sohl, Weber State University Track: AQMO Room: Bolden 5 4:20 PM Perturbing Vertical Wind Profile to Improve AERMOD Accuracy for Abrupt Surface Condition Changes Paper# 822 Hong Liu, Dillon Consulting; Jinliang Liu, Ontario Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change 4:40 PM AERMOD Low Wind Speed Improvements Status Report and New Evaluations Paper# 935 Bob Paine, Olga Samani, and Christopher Warren, AECOM 5:00 PM Sensitivity Analysis of NO2 1-hour Background Concentration Options in AERMOD - A Case Study Paper# 894 Kristin Fritchman and Arijit Pakrasi, CB&I 5:20 PM Comparison of the BLP Implementation in AERMOD to the use of an Objective Analysis Approach Paper# 1215 David J Long, American Electric Power Service Corporation Track: AQMO Room: Strand 13B 4:20 PM Measurement of Ambient Hydrochloric Acid near Utah’s Great Salt Lake Paper# 1031 Randal Martin, Utah State University CEE; Seth Arens, Utah Division of Air Quality Air Monitoring Center 4:40 PM Ambient Ammonia at Three Different Types of Sites in North China Plain in Summer 2014 Paper# 972 Zhaoyang Meng and Xiaobin Xu, Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences; Weili Lin, CMA Meteorological Observation Centre; Ying Wang, Hongbing Cheng and Wei Peng, Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences; Yian Jiang, China Railway Corporation; Yulin Xue, University of Science and Technology Beijing, China 5:00 PM Seasonal Variation Sources and Transport of Aerosols Collected at Lijiang Southeast Tibetan Plateau Paper# 989 Ningning Zhang, Junji Cao, Rujin Huang, Yuanqing He, Qiyuan Wang, Chongshu Zhu, Chinese Academy of Sciences A Comprehensive Regional Approach to Addressing Greenhouse Gas Emissions Track: CLIM Room: Strand 11A Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 4:00 PM Panel – TCC: CCP2 Chair: Abby Young, BAAQMD This panel will present on different aspects of understanding and addressing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in a major U.S. metropolitan region. All presenters represent the Bay Area Air Quality Management District Air District, a regional air quality and public health agency serving the 7 million people and 110 local jurisdictions of the San Francisco Bay Area. Presenters will demonstrate how this regional agency is using its technical 60 Final Program TECHNICAL SESSIONS planning and programmatic functions to develop informed actions to reduce GHG emissions in the Bay Area. Presentations will include: Air Toxics: Exposures and Effects Information on a recently installed regional fixed-site GHG measurement network with high-precision fast-response instruments developed to continuously measure carbon dioxide (CO2), carbon monoxide (CO) and methane (CH4), and provide information to track regional progress toward meeting GHG reduction goals. Data from the sites are presented to illustrate the utility of this monitoring network. Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 4:00 PM Platform – TCC: HEE2 Chair: Suresh Santanam, SU-Industrial Assessment Center Vice Chair: J.W. Morrow BAAQMD’s progress on the design and fabrication of a dedicated mobile GHG measurement platform, consisting of a research van equipped with state-of-the-art analyzers capable of measuring CO2, CH4, isotopic methane and nitrous oxide to help identify important GHG emission sources and source locations. BAAQMD is engaged in a regional planning effort to reduce GHG emissions. This presentation will include findings from the economic sector quantitative and policy analyses and a discussion of the rule-making and policy priorities arising from this planning process. Panelists: • Abby Young, BAAQMD • David Burch, BAAQMD • Phil Martien, BAAQMD • Karen Schkolnick, BAAQMD 4:20 PM Formaldehyde Air Emissions from Landfill-Gas-to-Energy Engines - A Health Risk Paper# 1203 Stephen Zemba and Matthew Estabrook, Sanborn, Head & Associates, Inc. 4:40 PM Adverse Health Effects in Tar Ball Workers and Boat Crews from Crude Oil Corexit Mixtures from the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Paper# 1152 Patricia M. Williams and Christopher P. Grice, University of New Orleans 5:00 PM Distribution Patterns of PM2.5-bound PAHs in Indoors and Outdoors in Cold Zone Paper# 1014 Mohammed Ali, Wei-wei Song, Li-yan Liu, Wan-li Ma, Wen-Long Li, and Yi-Fan Li, Harbin Institute of Technology; Yong-liang Ma, Tsinghua University; Feng-yan Want, Mei-yun Qi, Na Lv, and Ding-zhen Wang, Harbin Scientific Research Institute of Environmental Protection Offshore Oil & Gas Air Quality Programs Track: O&GS Room: Strand 12B Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 4:00 PM Panel – TCC: CHE2 Chair: Michael Waguespack, Waldemar S. Nelson Vice Chair: Brian Boyer, BTGap, L.L.C. The panel presentations and discussions will give an overview of air quality regulations, permitting and compliance requirements for oil and gas drilling and production operations in the Western, Central and Eastern Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic Seaboard. Representatives from regulatory agencies (BOEM, BSEE, EPA) will discuss their respective programs. Industry and consulting representatives will update the proposed changes to BOEM’s air quality regulations and discuss compliances issues and New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 61 Tuesday, June 21 BAAQMD has over 20 years of experience administering incentive programs to achieve early and voluntary emissions reductions primarily from the transportation sector. This presentation will provide an overview of the projects that the Air District has funded to reduce GHG emissions. 4:00 PM Absorption of Barium Sulfate into the Nail Beds of Residents Living Adjacent to an Oil Field Waste Site Paper# 1106 Patricia M. Williams and David W. McGregor, University of New Orleans Technical Program Working with University of California researchers, the BAAQMD has developed a regional consumption-based GHG emissions inventory, CBEI, that estimates an average household GHG footprint at the U.S. Census block level based on a full life-cycle analysis. This presentation will include the CBEI methodology and findings as well as interactive maps showing the GHG emission breakdown for major consumption categories across the region. Track: H&EE Room: Strand 13A TECHNICAL SESSIONS strategies for offshore air quality permitting and emission inventory requirements. The topics include: • Update by BOEM representative on existing BOEM Central and Western Gulf of Mexico (GOM) and Alaska air quality regulations and programs affecting oil and gas operations. • Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE) compliance update for air quality regulations affecting oil and gas exploration and production operations in the Central and Western GOM. • Update on EPA Eastern GOM and Atlantic Seaboard air quality regulations including information on permitting offshore wind turbines. • Update by industry representative and consultant on proposed BOEM air quality regulations and strategies for permitting and maintaining compliance with GOM air quality regulations. in the context of current and future rulemaking. This panel is designed to identify the array of regulations that are targeting utilities and discuss how companies and States are planning for compliance. Three perspectives will be presented: (1) the technology and operations of a power generator; (2) the authority and implementation responsibility held by a State environmental agency; and (3) the public utility and rate regulation of a State public service commission. The panel will identify the regulatory drivers influencing how electricity is produced and regulated, then analyze hurdles that must be considered and overcome to meet demands of regulatory compliance and consumer need. Specific environmental regulations to be discussed will include the Clean Power Plan, the Mercury & Air Toxics Standards, and the Cross-State Air Pollution Rule. Panelists: • Dallas Baker, Mississippi DEQ • Brian Toth, Southern Company • Air modeling studies for the GOM. • Scott Weaver, American Electric Power Panelists: • Shawn Shurden, Mississippi Public Service Commission • Cesar Alfaro,Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (invited) • Sheila Holman, North Carolina DEQ, Division of Air Quality • Brian E. Boyer, BTGap, L.L.C. Near Road Air Quality #1 • Holli Ensz, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management • Kelly Fortin, EPA Region 4 • Ralph Morris, Ramboll Environ • Gregory Southworth, Offshore Operators Committee Track: TRAN Room: Bolden 2 Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 4:00 PM Platform – TCC: OMS2 Chair: Maryam Delavarrafiee, North Carolina State University Vice Chair: Tanzila Khan, North Carolina State University Regulatory Issues Facing the Electric Power Industry 4:00 PM Case Study of MOVES Travel Demand Model Post Processors Paper# 891 Sandeep Puppala and Helen S. Ginzburg, WSP / Parsons Brinckerhoff Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 4:00 PM Panel – TCC: PWR1 Chair: Brian Toth, Southern Company Vice Chair: Dallas Baker, Mississippi DEQ 4:20 PM Modeling Ethanol Blends with MOVES2014 Paper# 1059 Roger Wayson, Wyle Aerospace; George Jospeh Noel, USDOT Volpe Center; Brian Y. Kim, Wyle Inc.; Geoff Cooper, Renewable Fuels Association Track: POWR Room: Bolden 6 Reliable and affordable electricity is essential to economic growth and national security. The electric power generation sector is among the most heavily regulated industries in the United States. Further environmental regulation is changing the way electricity is produced and has the potential to affect other industrial sectors as well as impact the individual residential electricity consumer. Utilities are diversifying energy resources and investing in new technology based on a number of regulatory drivers; however continued regulatory uncertainty adds another layer of complication to decision making. Coal and other fossil fuels will remain a part of electricity production to some degree for the foreseeable future, and States must work with generators to plan strategically 62 Final Program 4:40 PM Geospatial Variation of Real-world Emissions from a Light Duty Car Paper# 950 Tanzila Khan and H. Christopher Frey, North Carolina State University TECHNICAL SESSIONS 5:00 PM Gasoline Vehicle Fuel Efficiency and Emissions for GasDirect Injection Versus Port-Fuel Injection Paper# 953 Sanjam Singh and H. Christopher Frey, North Carolina State University 5:20 PM Renewed Focus on Air Quality Planning and Transportation Emissions Paper# 1211 Alan Sako, Heidi Rous, and Everest Yan, ESA PCR Life Cycle Approaches to Sustainable Material and Resource Management Track: SUST Room: Strand 12A Technical Program Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 4:00 PM Platform – TCC: SRC4 Chair: Ning Ai, University of Illinois at Chicago Vice Chair: Sam Vigil, CA Poly. State University Tuesday, June 21 4:00 PM New Approach for Waste Classification System in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi Paper# 982 Ahmed Rady, RTI International; Salem Al Braik, Mohammad Mosa, Ahmed Al Jassmi, Simon Pearson and Mohamed Ba Sahel, Environment Agency Abu Dhabi; Udayan Banerjee, Tadweer (The Center of Waste Management - Abu Dhabi) 4:20 PM End-of-Life Electric Vehicle Battery Management: An Inventory Analysis Paper# 1161 Ning Ai and Junjen Zheng, University of Illinois at Chicago 4:40 PM An Assessment of Energy Consumption in a Historic Office Building Paper# 1001 Diana Rojas and Luis Belelcazar, Universidad Nacional de Columbia 5:00 PM A Preliminary Life Cycle Assessment of Mango Production in Taiwan Paper# 1104 Geoff Nicki and Ming-Chien Su, National Dong Hwa University, Taiwan; Chin H. Chang, Tainan District Agricultural Research and Extension Station, Council of Agriculture, Taiwan New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 63 TECHNICAL SESSIONS – WEDNESDAY DAILY SCHEDULE Wednesday, June 22, 2016 Time Title Track Session Type Room 8:00-9:40 am Citizens Measuring Air Quality: Trends and Implications MINI panel Strand 10A/B 8:00-9:40 am Mercury Emission Control Techniques AQCT platform Bolden 5 8:00-9:40 am Ongoing Technical Challenges Addressing the Visibility Goal AQES panel Bolden 1 8:00-9:40 am Providing Air Quality Data to the Public AQMM platform Strand 11B 8:00-9:40 am Innovative Modeling Techniques AQMO platform Strand 11A 8:00-9:40 am Odor Issues and Solutions H&EE platform Strand 13A 8:00-9:40 am Onshore Oil & Gas Air Quality Testing and Measurements Programs O&GS panel Strand 12B 8:00-9:40 am Clean Air Act Regulatory Developments REGU platform Strand 13B 8:00-9:40 am Local Approaches to Zero-Waste and Sustainability Challenges SUST panel Strand 12A 8:00-9:40 am Community Noise and Vibration/Transportation Modeling Issues TRAN platform Bolden 2 8:00-9:40 am Solid and Liquid Biofuels WAST platform Bolden 6 9:40-10:20 am Session Break 10:20 am-noon Environmental Justice & Permitting Programs MINI panel Strand 10A/B 10:20 am-noon Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Control Technologies and Strategies AQCT platform Bolden 5 Next Generation of Air Monitoring Tools for Fugitive Fenceline and AQMM platform Strand 11B 10:20 am-noon Area Source Applications 10:20 am-noon NO2 and Air Toxics Modeling Case Studies AQMO platform Strand 11A 10:20 am-noon Meeting Sustainability Goals for Federal Facilities FEDS/SUST platform Strand 12A 10:20 am-noon EPA/National Air Quality Issues for Oil & Gas Operations O&GS panel Strand 12B 10:20 am-noon Clean Power Plan Legal Issues and Litigation Updates POWR/REGU panel Strand 13B 10:20 am-noon Near Road Air Quality #2 TRAN platform Bolden 2 10:20 am-noon Thermal Treatment Technologies and Waste Management WAST platform Bolden 6 10:20 am-noon What's That Thang? - Industries - #1 YPRO panel Bolden 1 12:05-1:35 pm Technical Coordinating Committee Meetings 1:40-3:20 pm NSR Reform: Recent Developments and Issues MINI panel 1:40-3:20 pm Emission Factor Development #1 AQES platform Bolden 2 1:40-3:20 pm Fenceline Monitoring Case Studies AQMM platform Strand 11B 1:40-3:20 pm Particulate Matter - Methods, Speciation & Analysis #1 AQMM platform Bolden 5 1:40-3:20 pm Climate Change Inventories of Short-Lived Pollutants CLIM platform Strand 11A 1:40-3:20 pm Odor Regulation and Litigation Government and Industry Perspective H&EE panel Strand 13A 1:40-3:20 pm Boiler and Engine MACT Implementation INDU platform Bolden 6 1:40-3:20 pm Oil & Gas Operations - Waste and Water Management O&GS/WAST panel Strand 12B 1:40-3:20 pm Clean Air Act Compliance Issues REGU platform Strand 13B 1:40-3:20 pm Sustainability Management SUST platform Strand 12A 1:40-3:20 pm What's That Thang? - Industries - #2 YPRO panel Bolden 1 3:00-4:00 pm Session Break 4:00-6:00 pm The Risk Management Plan Modernization Rule - What it Means to Industry MINI panel Strand 10A/B 4:00-6:00 pm Biofiltration and Other Methods for Air Pollution Control AQCT platform Strand 12A 4:00-6:00 pm Emission Factor Development #2 AQES platform Bolden 2 4:00-6:00 pm Measurement of Emissions from Industrial Point Sources AQMM platform Strand 11B 4:00-6:00 pm Particulate Matter - Methods, Speciation & Analysis #2 AQMM platform Bolden 5 4:00-6:00 pm Human and Environmental Effects of Air Pollution Exposure H&EE platform Strand 11A 4:00-6:00 pm Odor Modeling and Regulation H&EE platform Strand 13A 4:00-6:00 pm Offshore Oil & Gas Environmental Assessments and Compliance O&GS panel Strand 12B 4:00-6:00 pm New Source Review Case Studies REGU platform Strand 13B 4:00-6:00 pm Wastewater/Residuals Beneficial Use, Treatment and Management WAST platform Bolden 6 4:00-6:00 pm What's That Thang? - Control Devices YPRO panel Bolden 1 64 Final Program Tech Session Rooms – See page 15 Strand 10A/B TECHNICAL SESSIONS – WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22 Citizens Measuring Air Quality: Trends and Implications Mercury Emission Control Techniques Track: AQCT Room: Bolden 5 Mini-Symposium Room: Strand 10A/B Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 8:00 AM Platform – TCC: AAC1 Chair: Sheila Glesmann, ADA Carbon Solutions Vice Chair: Regina Rodriguez, Carbonxt, Inc. Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 8:00 AM Panel – TCC: PUB3 Chair: Matthew Stein, Multitude • What data can citizens collect and which questions can be answered? • How should industry prepare for issues arising from citizencollected air quality data? What legal and regulatory implications could come from this? • How will agencies address data quality issues for regulatory purposes? What legal obligations do agencies have to address citizen concerns? Panelists: • Matthew A Stein, CEO, Multitude 8:20 AM Using Sulfur-Containing Activated Carbon to Adsorb Aqueous Mercury and Inhibit Mercury Re-emission from Actual Wet Flue Gas Desulfurization Water Paper# 925 Che-Jung Hsu and Hsin-Jin Chiu, Graduate Institute of Environmental Engineering, National Taiwan University; HsingCheng Hsi, National Taiwan University 8:40 AM Conversion and Reduction of Multi-pollutants (Hg0/NO/dioxin) by V2O5-WO3/TiO2 Catalysts Paper# 827 Wei Ting Hsu, Pao Chen Hung, Shu Hao Chang, and Moo Been Chang, Graduate Institute of Environmental Engineering, National Central University, Taiwan; Chyi Woei Young, Chi Lang Chen, and Hsing Wang Li, New Materials R&D Department, China Steel Corporation, Taiwan 9:00 AM Photo-oxidation and Adsorption of Hg0 in Flue Gases by WO3 Modified TiO2 at High Temperatures Paper# 883 Huazhen Shen, Iau-ren Ie, and Chung-shin Yuan, Institute of Environmental Engineering, National Sun Yat-sen University, Taiwan; Chung-Hsuang Hung, Department of Safety, Health and Environmental Engineering, National Kaohsiung First University of Science & Technology, Taiwan • Nicholas William Targ, Holland Knight • Nicholas Bantle Masson, Multitude New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 65 Wednesday, June 22 • Andrea Polidori, SCAQMD 8:00 AM Significance of Activated Carbon Oxygen Functional Groups for Mercury Adsorption Paper# 1148 Regina Rodriguez and David Mazyck, University of Florida Technical Program The Internet of Things (IoT), mobile devices, cloud computing, and social networking are converging to allow citizens to take a more active role in monitoring local air quality on a continuous basis with distributed connected devices that are orders of magnitude lower in cost than today’s regulatory monitors. This increase in citizen-generated data has wide-reaching implications for citizens, industry, and air quality agencies. Simply gathering air quality data, however, is of limited use if the data are poor in quality or lacks proper analysis techniques. Citizens need reliable, scientifically accurate methods to properly calibrate, analyze, store and evaluate streaming data from low-cost fixed and mobile monitors. When citizen-generated data are evaluated in this manner, industry and regulatory agencies may find themselves relying on them to diagnose the scope and causes of poor air quality hot spots if they do not have access to equal or more robust targeted data. The panel will discuss issues that arise from the increased collection and use of citizen-generated air quality data, including: TECHNICAL SESSIONS Ongoing Technical Challenges Addressing the Visibility Goal Track: AQES Room: Bolden 1 Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 8:00 AM Panel – TCC: APV Chair: Rob Farber, Atmospheric Clarity Vice-Chair: Jenny Hand, Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere (CIRA) The Officers of the APV Technical Committee thought it would be an excellent idea to have a preview of our fall visibility specialty conference at the Grand Tetons in Wyoming. We have assembled 5 visibility experts who will share their diverse technical expertise in this panel presentation and discussion. They will discuss the technical challenges confronting researchers to make continued progress toward the national (U.S.) visibility goal. We know that much of the haze impacting Class I visibility protected areas emanates from large urban areas. But there is also natural haze, non-regulated haze and even haze transported across our continental borders. There is a national visibility monitoring network called IMPROVE. This network examines trends in aerosol composition and reconstructed haze. Emission reductions from urban areas have led to visibility improvements. However, there have also been regional increased aerosol trends. Modeling plays an important role in sorting the many sources from both local and longer range transport that impact visibility in Class I areas. We will touch on the challenges including impacts from wildfires, windblown dust and international sources. There is a concern by the stewards of our Class I areas that existing health regulations may be insufficient to eventually meet the visibility goal. These technical issues and more will be presented and discussed by leading experts from the National Park Service research group, EPRI/the electric utility industry, Desert Research Institute and modeling addressed by Ramboll Environ. We will conclude the session with eagerly anticipated highlights from our fall visibility specialty conference. Panelists: • Jenny Hand, CIRA • Naresh Kumar, EPRI • Ralph Morris, Ramboll Environ • Bret Schichtel, National Park Service-Air Resources Division • Ricky Tropp, Desert Research Institute 66 Final Program Providing Air Quality Data to the Public Track: AQMM Room: Strand 11B Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 8:00 AM Platform – TCC: PUB1 Chair: Jayme Graham, Allegheny County Health Department 8:00 AM Measuring Air Quality and Enhancing Science Education Paper# 890 Gayle Hagler, Marta Fuoco, Michael Compher, Patrick Miller, and Ron Williams, EPA; Timothy McArthuer, SSAI 8:20 AM Urban Air Quality Prediction Using Support Vector Machine with Spatio-temporal Features Paper# 926 Chih-Chun Liu and Pei-Te Chiueh, Graduate Institute of Environmental Engineering, National Taiwan University 8:40 AM Next Generation Citizen Science and Smart Phone Emissions Monitoring, Spot the Smoke Paper# 1051 Shawn Dolan, Virtual Technology LLC 9:00 AM Air Quality and Vibration Monitoring of Construction Sites and Addressing Neighbor Complaints Paper# 1202 Everest Yan, Heidi Rous, and Alan Sako, ESA PCR 9:20 AM Performance Evaluation of Low-cost Sensors for Measuring Gaseous and Particle Air Pollutants: Results from Two Years of Field and Laboratory Testing Paper# 1023 Andrea Polidori, Laki Tisopulos, Vasileios Papapostolou, Brandon Feenstra, Jeremy Pathmanabhan, and Hang Zhang, SCAQMD TECHNICAL SESSIONS Innovative Modeling Techniques Odor Issues and Solutions Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 8:00 AM Platform – TCC: APM4 Chair: Russell Lee, RF Lee Consulting Vice Chair: David J. Long, American Electric Power Service Corporation Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 8:00 AM Platform – TCC: ODR1 Chair: Steven Trabue, USDA Agricultural Research Service Vice Chair: Raymond Porter, Porter Odor Science Track: AQMO Room: Strand 11A Track: H&EE Room: Strand 13A 8:00 AM Impact of Low Sulfur Diets on Air and Odor Emissions from Swine Operations Paper# 836 Steven Trabue, Brian Kerr, and Kenwood Scoggin, USDA Agricultural Research Service 8:00 AM A Peek into the Future: Overview of Appendix W Changes and Their Significance Paper# 1200 Mark Garrison, Thomas Wickstrom, Surya Ramaswamy, Richard Hamel, and Carlos Szembek, ERM 8:40 AM Evaluation of the Use of Computational Fluid Dynamics Models for Regulatory Air Dispersion Modeling Paper# 1153 Shagun Bhat, Geosyntec Consultants Inc.; Morgan Reed and Eric Peterson, MMI Engineering Inc.; Steven Ramsey, Geosyntec Consultants Inc. 9:00 AM Evaluating AERMOD and Wind Tunnel Derived Equivalent Building Dimensions Paper# 1015 Sergio Guerra, Ron L. Petersen, CPP Inc. 9:00 AM Baseline Hydrogen Sulfide Monitoring at the New Orleans East Bank Wastewater Treatment Plan Using OdaLog Monitors Paper# 1176 Felicia Bergeron, Sewerage & Water Board of New Orleans; Poojitha Aleti, University of New Orleans; Abhinay Jilla, University of New Orleans; Aamani Kura, Louisiana State University & Marathon Petroleum Corporation; Ryan Becker, University of New Orleans; Bhaskar Kura, University of New Orleans 9:20 AM ODEMS (Odorant Dispersion and Emissions Monitoring System) Smart Tool to Measure and Predict the Odorous Emissions of a Composting Plant Activity Paper# 1149 Rony Akiki and Brice Helio, Environnement SA; Youssef Stitiou and Patrice Bonnet, ISEO; Didier Buty, Aria Technologies; Stephane Cariou and Jean-Louis Fanlo, Ecole des mines d'Ales; Didier Samani, Alliance Environnement New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 67 Wednesday, June 22 9:20 AM Emissions Scenario Optimization Through a Flexible Dispersion-Modeling Framework Paper# 939 Chad Milando, Stuart Batterman, and Sheena Martenies, University of Michigan School of Public Health 8:40 AM Odour Assessment Modelling and Mitigation for a Sugar Refinery with Encroaching Sensitive Land Use Paper# 1135 Tony van der Vooren, Amec Foster Wheeler Technical Program 8:20 AM Alkylpyrazine Causing Malodor Odor Emission from Metal Working Fluids at an Automotive Parts Manufacturing Facility Paper# 876 John R. Kominsky, Environmental Quality Management Inc. 8:20 AM Strategies to Deal with Monitored Exceedances When AERMOD Can’t Be Used Paper# 1113 Ron L. Petersen, CPP Inc. TECHNICAL SESSIONS Onshore Oil & Gas Air Quality Testing and Measurements Programs Track: O&GS Room: Strand 12B Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 8:00 AM Panel – TCC: CHE3 Chair: Michael Waguespack, Waldemar S. Nelson Vice Chair: Brian Boyer, BTGap, L.L.C. The panel presentations and discussions will give an update on measurement technology used to detect methane and VOC emissions and leaks and ways to optimize operations to minimize leaks. Panelists include a regulatory representative and consultants and service providers for stack testing, leak detection, repair and facility optimization. The topics include: • Overview of the Colorado oil and gas emissions program, including discussion of field work and studies conducted and technology used for testing and measurement of emissions; • Update on the latest technology regarding optical gas imaging; • Use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (drones) for leak monitoring; • Best practices for finding and reducing natural gas leaks from oil and gas operations; • Engine emissions stack testing. These topics relate to various aspects of testing and measurement of natural gas leaks from oil and natural gas operations. Also, best practices methods used for engine emission testing will be discussed. The presentations will provide timely information for optimizing operations, leak detection and reduction of natural gas emissions and stack testing engines. Panelists: • Nathan Linhardt, P.E., Waldemar S. Nelson & Co., Inc. • Mark McMillan, Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, Colorado Air Pollution Control Division • Jon Morris, Providence Engineering and Environmental Group LLC • Landon Phillips, DataWing Aerial Analytics • Jeff Voorhis, P.E., HY-BON/EDI 68 Final Program Clean Air Act Regulatory Developments Track: REGU Room: Strand 13B Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 8:00 AM Platform – TCC: REG4 Chair: David Jordan, ERM 8:00 AM Potential Impacts of Proposed Revisions to the Landfill NSPS/EG Paper# 1019 Julie Hall and Geed Latif, Cornerstone Environmental Group LLC 8:20 AM PVC MACT and Lack of Overlap Provisions Paper# 1057 Omer Wolff and Laura Durst, Formosa Plastics Corporation 8:40 AM How Changes to EPA’s Risk Management Program will Affect Industry, Emergency Responders and Communities Paper# 992 David Heinold, AECOM; Douglas Smith, Enviro-Risk LLC 9:00 AM Advice and Context: The Role of CASAC in Contextualizing Background Pollution and Adverse NAAQS Effects Paper# 1187 Clint Woods, Association of Air Pollution Control Agencies Local Approaches to Zero-Waste and Sustainability Challenges Track: SUST Room: Strand 12A Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 8:00 AM Panel – TCC: SRC2 Chair: Ning Ai, University of Illinois at Chicago Vice Chair: Sam Vigil, California Polytechnic University San Luis Obispo This panel discusses how small communities like universities can develop zero-waste and sustainability programs that tailor to their unique waste streams and population characteristics under budget and resource constraints. Panel discussions will highlight recent initiatives at two higher education institutions: University of Illinois at Chicago and California Polytechnic University at San Luis Obispo. Panelists will discuss the critical role of material and waste management in urban sustainability, the analogy between universities and small-scale urban systems/communities, the significant value of community- and building-specific data collection and analysis, various programs for educating citizens and encouraging community participation in zero-waste and sustainability efforts, participatory approaches to integrating zero-waste into campus-wide strategic plans, successful models that may be applicable to other organizations and communities, new TECHNICAL SESSIONS Solid and Liquid Biofuels curriculum that is reshaping the culture of material and waste management, as well as the catalyst effects that universities may generate to inspire and engage surrounding communities. Track: WAST Room: Bolden 6 Panelists: Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 8:00 AM Platform – TCC: WMB3 Chair: Melanie Sattler, University of Texas at Arlington Vice Chair: David Greene, SCS Engineers • Ning Ai, University of Illinois at Chicago • Samuel A. Vigil, California Polytechnic University San Luis Obispo 8:00 AM Engineered Biomass Fuels: Sizing, Drying, Densification Paper# 819 Thomas F. McGowan, TMTS Associates Inc. • Rebekah Oulton, California Polytechnic University San Luis Obispo • Cynthia Klein-Banai, University of Illinois at Chicago 8:20 AM EPA’s First Case-Specific Non-Waste Determination for a Boiler Opportunity Fuel Paper# 878 David H. Minott, Arc5 Environmental Consulting LLC • Thomas Morahan, Greystone Environmental Management Community Noise and Vibration/Transportation Modeling Issues Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 8:00 AM Platform – TCC: CNV Chair: Robert Mentzer Jr, HMMH Vice Chair: George Noel, USDOT/Volpe Center 9:00 AM Characterization of Rice Straw and Bagasse Refuse Derived Fuel Paper# 966 Wisinee Thipsupanimit, Ketwalee Kositkanawuth, Prapat Pongkreitkul, Department of Environmental Engineering, King Mongkut's University of Technology, Thailand 8:00 AM Test Cases and New Options in the FAAs New Aviation Environmental Design Tool AEDT Paper# 991 Robert C Mentzer, HMMH 8:20 AM Spatial Distribution Of Noise Levels in the Vicinity of Power Stations Paper# 1213 Ashraf Ramadan, Kuwait Institute for Scientific Research Technical Program 8:40 AM A Techno-Economic Analysis of Emission Controls on Hydrocarbon Biofuel Production Paper# 1024 Arpit Bhatt, Yimin Zhang, Ryan Davis, Annika Eberle, and Garvin Heath, National Renewable Energy Laboratory Track: TRAN Room: Bolden 2 9:20 AM Technology Development for Utilizing Trap Grease and Sewer Grease for Biodiesel Production Paper# 960 Qingshi Tu and Mingming Lu, University of Cincinnati 9:00 AM Port of Houston 2013 Mobile Source Emission Inventory Paper# 870 Richard Billings, John Koupal, Rick Baker, Heather Perez, Roger Chang, Michael Sabisch, Alan Stanard, Jenneifer Sellers and Susan McClutchey, Eastern Research Group; Kenneth Gathright and Leah Oberlin, Port of Houston Authority New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 69 Wednesday, June 22 8:40 AM Assessing the Impact of Real-world Driving Cycles, Fuel Economy, and Tailpipe Exhaust Emissions on Eco-rating of Passenger Cars Paper#1095 Nikhil Rastogi and H. Christopher Frey, North Carolina State University TECHNICAL SESSIONS Environmental Justice & Permitting Programs Track: Mini-Symposium Room: Strand 10A/B Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 10:20 AM Panel – TCC: REG5 Chair: Chris Nelson, 3M Company EPA defines Environmental Justice as “the fair treatment and meaningful involvement of all people regardless of race, color, national origin, or income, with respect to the development, implementation, and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations, and policies.” As EPA and the States strive to ensure Americans all enjoy protection from environmental hazards and have access to related decision making processes, States are implementing new programs to meet those ends. Panelists will describe State-level Environmental Justice programs, including current State policy, program outcomes, and implications for industry permitting activities. Ms. McGee-Collier will discuss the incorporation of Environmental Justice into Mississippi’s processes and her experience on the National Environmental Justice Advisory Council for EPA. Mr. Smith will outline Minnesota’s current Environmental Justice goals and policy. His presentation will specifically cover their “Improving Minneapolis Air” pilot project, under which permit holders in areas with high citizen concern about industrial facilities were asked to implement best environmental practices. Panelists: • Melissa McGee-Collier, Mississippi DEQ • Jeff Smith, Minnesota Pollution Control Agency • Third Panelist to be Determined Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Control Technologies and Strategies Track: AQCT Room: Bolden 5 Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 10:20 AM Platform – TCC: AAC2 Chair: Arijit Pakrasi, CB&I 10:20 AM Comparison of Control Strategies for Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Public Transit Buses in Ohio Paper# 1162 Neelnayana Kalita, Ashok Kumar and Zonghua Xu, The University of Toledo 10:40 AM Effects of Biodiesel Applications on the Transportation Fleet in Houston Paper# 1048 Raghava Rao Kommalapati, Hongbo Du, Sumal Shah, and Ziaul Huque, Prairie View AM University 70 Final Program 11:00 AM Polyethylenimine Applications in Post Combustion Carbon Capture from Theoretical Study to Experimental Work Paper# 1096 Xinhua Shen, Hongbo Du, Ziaul Huque, and Raghava Rao Kommalapati, Prairie View AM University 11:20 AM Evaluation of Mitigation Strategies for the Hydrocarbon Sector in Colombia Paper# 1125 Mario Andrs Hernandez, Universidad EAN, Columbia Next Generation of Air Monitoring Tools for Fugitive Fenceline and Area Source Applications Track: AQMM Room: Strand 11B Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 10:20 AM Platform – TCC: AAM5 Chair: Antony Chen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas/Desert Research Institute Vice Chair: Curtis Laush, IMACC 10:20 AM Validation of Fugitive Emissions Measurement Techniques Using Differential Absorption Lidar and a Controlled Release System Paper# 916 Rod Robinson, F. Innocenti, J. Helmore, T. Gardiner, A. Finlayson, F. Few, and A. Conner Name, National Physical Laboratory 10:40 AM Using an Environmental Element Evaluation System to Measure the Ease of Detection of Hydrocarbon Gas Emissions as Detected by Optical Gas Imaging Cameras Paper# 1008 Tracey L Footer, Eastern Research Group Inc. 11:00 AM Design and Deployment of a Mobile Monitoring Vehicle for the Real-Time Measurement of Indicator Gases and Aerosols Paper# 1110 James Strain, AmbiLabs 11:20 AM Quantifying Tank Emissions with an Infrared Imager Paper# 1219 Yousheng Zeng, Albert Sanders and Jonathan Morris, Providence Photonics LLC TECHNICAL SESSIONS NO2 and Air Toxics Modeling Case Studies Meeting Sustainability Goals for Federal Facilities Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 10:20 AM Platform – TCC: APM3 Chair: Tony Schroeder, Trinity Consultants Vice Chair: Mark Garrison, ERM Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 10:20 AM Platform – TCC: FED2 Chair: Brenda P. Daniel, CH2M Vice Chair: David Minott, Arc5 Environmental Consulting, LLC 10:20 AM AERMOD Alternative Model Evaluation for 1-Hour NO2 at a Steel Mini-Mill Paper# 1009 Douglas Murray, Michael Newman and David Gaige, TRC; Craig West, EVRAZ Rocky Mountain Steel 10:20 AM Leveraging Dashboards to Drive Environmental Decision-Making Paper# 892 Krista Goodale, Solution Foundry; Karen L Winnie, USAF; Andrew Wessendorf, Solution Foundry 10:40 AM Assessing the Changing Impacts over Time of Gas Station Related Source NO2 Concentrations Paper# 919 David A. Sullivan, Dennis Hlinka and Mark Holdsworth, Sullivan Environmental Consulting Inc. 10:40 AM ISO 14001 Recordkeeping and the Texas National Guard’s Compliance Tool Kit Paper# 1053 Sharon K Jones, Texas Army National Guard; Melita Elmore, BSI Track: AQMO Room: Strand 11A Track: FEDS/SUST Room: Strand 12A 11:20 AM Spatial and Temporal Variation of the Atmospheric Mercury Concentrations Emitted from a Coal-Fired Power Plant in Mexico Paper# 1058 Gilberto Fuentes, Humberto Bravo, Ernesto Caetano, and Victor Magaña, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México; Sergio Rosas, Comision Federal de Electricidad; Rodolfo Sosa and Gustavo Vazquez, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México 11:20 AM Contingency Base Solid Waste Disposal Planning Using Value-Focused Thinking Paper# 1216 Alfred E. Thal, Abram Crutchfield, Robert A. Wolfe, Matthew J. Robbins, and Brandon M. Lucas, Air Force Institute of Technology 11:40 AM A Cost Analysis of Waste-to-Energy Applications for Small Modern Expeditionary Forces Paper# 1217 Alfred E. Thal, Huan Li and Brandon M. Lucas, Air Force Institute of Technology Wednesday, June 22 11:40 AM Demonstrating Compliance with the 1-hr NO2 NAAQS for Intermittent Sources - A Case Study Paper# 1052 Disha C. Shah, and Cynthia S. Hibbard, CDM Smith Technical Program 11:00 AM Using National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) Compliance Processes for Improved Environmental Compliance on Kirtland AFB Paper# 1210 Martha Garcia and Melissa Clark, USAF Kirtland Air Force Base 11:00 AM Characterize Air Toxics Impacts from Ethanol-gasoline Vehicles in Urban Area by AERMOD Modeling Paper# 974 Jiun-Horng Tsai, Shih-Ru Tsai, and Chi-Min Huang, National Cheng Kung University New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 71 TECHNICAL SESSIONS EPA/National Air Quality Issues for Oil & Gas Operations Clean Power Plan Legal Issues and Litigation Updates Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 10:20 AM Panel – TCC: CHE4 Chair: Michael Waguespack, Waldemar S. Nelson Vice Chair: Brian Boyer, BTGap, L.L.C. Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 10:20 AM Panel – TCC: REG6 Chair: Rahul Thaker, North Carolina DEQ Division of Air Quality Track: O&GS Room: Strand 12B National regulatory initiatives to quantify and reduce volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and greenhouse gas emissions have been a driver for measurement studies for the entire oil and natural gas supply chain. Cooperative measurement studies by nongovernmental organizations and industry groups have yielded much empirical data for new source performance standard (NSPS) OOOO development. Besides NSPS OOOO, recent changes to the ozone NAAQS could impact oil and natural gas industry venting and combustion emissions, depending on which areas are in nonattainment for the new ozone standard. The topics include: • Results of a recent measurement study of methane emissions from United States natural gas gathering and processing systems. • A discussion of methane leakage from oil and gas operations and what has been learned from recent studies. • Status of changes to oil and gas methane and VOC emission standards in 40 CFR 60 Subpart OOOO – Standards of Performance for Crude Oil and Natural Gas Production, Transmission and Distribution. • Update on ONE Future, a coalition of natural gas industry companies focused on identifying policy and technical solutions improve the management of methane emissions associated with the production, processing, transmission and distribution of natural gas. • Potential impact of the new ozone NAAQS standards on the oil and natural gas industry. These topics discuss national issues affecting oil and gas operations. The presentations supply valuable information on oil and gas natural gas emissions and associated emission standards. Panelists: • Ramón Alvarez, Ph.D., Environmental Defense Fund • Jim Kibler, AGL Resources • Anthony J. Marchese, Ph.D., Colorado State University • Bruce Moore, EPA OAQPS • Ramesh Narasimhan, ERM 72 Final Program Track: REGU/POWR Room: Strand 13B EPA promulgated “Carbon Pollution Emission Guidelines for Existing Stationary Sources: Electric Utility Generating Units (EGUs)”, commonly known as Clean Power Plan (CPP), on October 23, 2015. These guidelines establish emissions standards for greenhouse gas emissions as CO2 from EGUs on a uniform nation-wide basis. The States can either meet the nation-wide standards or optionally, they can meet State-specific goals. Knowing the history of prior guideline development (e.g., EPA has only developed 5 other guidelines in the last 45 years under §111d), specifically, how EPA had actually developed the emissions standards for other sources, it is believed that any emission standard such as for CO2 for EGUs based on requirements not associated with the unit (EGU) itself, may be improper and illegal. In addition the critical issue is whether or not the EPA can promulgate a guideline for a source category under §111d when the same category is already regulated under a different provision of the Clean Air Act, specifically, under §112. Various challenges to the rule have been filed with the courts on some of the same issues. On February 9, 2016, the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) has stayed the implementation of the CPP, pending disposition of the challenges to the merits of the rule by the U.S. Appeals Court for the District of Columbia (USDC) and disposition of a writ of certiorari, if such writ is sought from the SCOTUS. Finally, as per the EPA, no State plans are required to be submitted by any State agency by the deadline of September 6, 2016, and the EPA is not enforcing any requirement under the CPP at this time, until the challenges are resolved by the courts. This panel session will include presentations, discussions, and an overview of CPP State plan development and implementation issues, as well as State-specific solutions and perspectives on EPAs legal basis for the rule. The expert panel will include participants from a State agency, an environmental group, and law firms. Panelists: • Sam M. Hayes, General Counsel, North Carolina DEQ • Tauna M. Szymanski, Senior Associate, Hunton & Williams • Monica Gibson, Of Counsel, Liskow & Lewis • Tomás Carbonell, Director of Regulatory Policy and Senior Attorney, Environmental Defense Fund TECHNICAL SESSIONS Near Road Air Quality #2 10:40 AM Emissions From the Combustion of Unused Pharmaceuticals in a Municipal Waste Combustor Paper# 1139 Marc A. R. Cone, Jamie Farrin, Andrea Galasyn, Anne Hewes, Carla Hopkins, Andrew Johnson, Mark King, Stacy R. Knapp, Rick Perkins, Kathy Tarbuck, Kurt Tidd, Danielle O. Twomey, Michael W. Wardrop, Maine Department of Environmental Protection Track: TRAN Room: Bolden 2 Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 10:20 AM Platform – TCC: OMS3 Chair: Helen Ginzburg, WSP | Parsons Brinckerhoff Vice Chair: Gurdas Sandhu, Fellow, ORISE Research Program at EPA 10:20 AM Particulate Matter Monitoring for Larger-Scale Construction Projects Paper# 887 Helen Ginzburg, WSP / Parsons Brinckerhoff; Guido Schattanek, GGS; Mei Wu, WSP / Parsons Brinckerhoff 11:00 AM A Modelling and Monitoring Study for Roadway Air Quality Assessment in Ontario Canada Paper# 1032 Ahammad Ali and Michael Lepage, RWDI Air Inc.; Colin Welburn, Welburn Consulting 11:20 AM Measurement and Modeling of Road Side Black Carbon Emissions Paper# 1026 Amal Agharkar, Mingming Lu and Emily Kang, University of Cincinnati Track: WAST Room: Bolden 6 Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 10:20 AM Platform – TCC: WMR1 Chair: Paul Lemieux, EPA Vice Chair: Marc Cone, Maine Department of Environmental Protection 10:20 AM Thermal Treatment of Special and Difficult to Treat Organic Wastes in Soil Paper# 815 Thomas F McGowan, TMTS Associates Inc. What’s That Thang? - Industries - #1 Sponsored by CK Associates Track: YPRO Room: Bolden 1 Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 10:20 AM Panel – TCC: CHE5 Chair: Jennifer Tullier, CK Associates Industry representatives will explain how their processes work, providing an overview of the industry/process, discuss common emission sources, regulatory challenges and give a brief look at the future of their industry. Industries covered will include power generation, specialty chemicals, industrial gas manufacturing, and natural gas processing. All presenters will follow the same agenda, allowing attendees to make comparisons across industries. This is a great introductory panel presentation for all attendees but is focused on reaching the student/young professional attendee. Panelists: • Robbie Laborde, Cleco • Jen Moore, 3M Environmental Operations • Laura L. Cremer, Praxair Inc. • Blake Phillips, Enlink Midstream New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 73 Wednesday, June 22 Thermal Treatment Technologies and Waste Management 11:20 AM Disaster Waste Management Decision Support Tools Paper# 905 Paul Lemieux, Susan Thorneloe, and Timothy Boe, EPA, Office of Research and Development; Colin Hayes, Molly Rodgers, Eastern Research Group Technical Program 10:40 AM Effect of Low Ambient Temperature and Contact with Snow on Composition of Dilute Exhaust from a Light-Duty Gasoline Vehicle Engine Paper# 1198 Yevgen Nazarenko, Uday Kurien, Rodrigo Benjamin Rangel-Alvarado, Parisa A. Ariya, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada; Sebastien Fournier, Patrice Seers, Ecole de Technologie Superieure, Montreal, QC, Canada 11:00 AM Effective Destruction of Discarded Pharmaceuticals and Personal Care Products in a Municipal Waste Combustor Paper# 846 Stacy R. Knapp, Marc A. R. Cone, Jamie Farrin, Andrea Galasyn, Anne Hewes, Carla Hopkins, Andrew Johnson, Mark King, Rick Perkins, Kathy Tarbuck, Kurt Tidd, Danielle O. Twomey, Michael W. Wardrop, Maine Department of Environmental Protection TECHNICAL SESSIONS NSR Reform: Recent Developments and Issues Fenceline Monitoring Case Studies Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 1:40 PM Panel – TCC: REG7 Chair: Gary McCutchen, RTP Environmental Associates, Inc. Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 1:40 PM Platform – TCC: AAM6 Chair: Praveen Srirama, CEMRC Vice Chair: Rick Osa, ERM Mini-Symposium Room: Strand 10A/B NSR permitting continues to be affected by EPA policy and court decisions regarding implementation of the programs, including the PM2.5 National Ambient Air Quality Standard, the aggregation rule, and other issues. A panel of experts spanning local, State, and federal permitting authorities will discuss major developments in NSR, point out ways that facility operations could be affected by these developments, and identify issues that remain unsettled. Panelists: • Ken Weiss, ERM • Raj Rao, NSR Group Leader, EPA OAQPS • Bill Wehrum, Hunton & Williams LLP • Bryan Johnston, Louisiana DEQ Emission Factor Development #1 Track: AQES Room: Bolden 2 Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 1:40 PM Platform – TCC: AAE2 Chair: Chun Yi Wu, Minnesota Pollution Control Agency Vice Chair: Stephen Boone, RTI International 1:40 PM Development of Marine Vessel Emissions using AIS Transponder Data Paper# 830 Suresh Raja, Nathaniel Collett, Jerry Riggs and Matthew Iman, ENERCON Services Inc. 2:00 PM Emission Factor Development for Mercury Emitted From Municipal Solid Waste during Processing and Handling Paper# 843 Chun Yi Wu, Anne Jackson and Ian Babineau, Minnesota Pollution Control Agency 2:20 PM Quantifying Mercury Resulting from Cremation of Dental Amalgam in Minnesota Paper# 956 Sandra L. Myers and David Bowles, University of Minnesota School of Dentistry 74 Final Program Track: AQMM Room: Strand 11B 1:40 PM Perimeter Air Monitoring Plan at an Active Mercury Remediation Site Paper# 1004 Constant R. Marks, Yu Jun Leong and Christopher M. Green, Geosyntec Consultants; Joshua P. Nickless, CDM Smith 2:00 PM Designing and Implementing Fenceline Air Monitoring Programs. Paper# 1025 Melissa McLaughlin, AECOM 2:20 PM Overview of the Benzene and other Toxics Exposure (BEE-TEX) Field Study Paper# 903 Eduardo P Olaguer, Houston Advanced Research Center 2:40 PM EPA Alternative Method 082 Digital Camera Opacity Technique Success Story Ferro-Alloy NESHAP Paper# 1054 Shawn Dolan, Virtual Technology LLC Particulate Matter - Methods, Speciation & Analysis #1 Track: AQMM Room: Bolden 5 Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 1:40 PM Platform – TCC: APP1/AAE1 Chair: Michael Meyer, Partilogical, LLC Vice Chair: Ricky Tropp, Desert Research Institute 1:40 PM Data Quality Assessment of EPAs PM2.5 Chemical Speciation Network CSN Derived from Six Collocated CSN Sites in 2013 Paper# 1098 Ricky Tropp, Desert Research Institute 2:00 PM Trends in Ion Balance at Urban Sites in the US Paper# 1182 Prakash Doraiswamy, RTI International TECHNICAL SESSIONS 2:20 PM Particle Size Distributions in and Around a Poultry House Before, During and After Flock Cleanout Paper# 1111 Philip J. Silva and Nanh Lovanh, USDA - Agriculture Research Service 2:40 PM Impact on the Waste Industry from Proposed EG and Supplemental NSPS Rules for Landfills Paper# 1091 Cassandra Drotman, Raymond Huff and Patrick Sullivan, SCS Engineers 2:40 PM Influences of Meteorological Factors and Emission Sectors on the Characteristics of PM10 and PM2.5 in a Cold Region of Northern China Paper# 980 Wei Wei Song, Harbin Institute of Technology 3:00 PM A Look at Fugitive GHG Emissions Reporting and the Effects on Regulated Facilities Paper# 1089 John Henkelman, Patrick S. Sullivan and Raymond H. Huff, SCS Engineers Climate Change Inventories of Short-Lived Pollutants Track: CLIM Room: Strand 11A Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 1:40 PM Platform – TCC: CCP3 Chair: Flint Webb, Leidos Vice Chair: Michael Conrardy, AECOM 1:40 PM Environmental, Health and Economic Cobenefits of Mitigating Short-lived Climate Pollutants from the Municipal Solid Waste Sector in India Paper# 831 Joseph Donahue and Nimmi Damodaran, Abt Associates Odor Regulation and Litigation: Government and Industry Perspectives Track: H&EE Room: Strand 13A Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 1:40 PM Panel – TCC: ODR2 Chair: Raymond Porter, Porter Odor Science Vice Chair: Michael McGinley, St. Croix Sensory, Inc. In the United States, there are no Federal regulations limiting or defining odor. States and municipalities have stepped into the void to create and enforce odor regulations. However odor regulations vary from State to State and from industry to industry. Knowing a locality’s odor regulation is not always easy since these regulations are not well published. This session will look at odor regulations and litigation of these laws. Panelists will include industry representatives who have been the target of odor regulation, regulators have who drafted regulation on odor, litigation experts who have represented clients concerned about odor, and a consultant who will share experiences with odor regulatory statues and challenges of measuring and verifying ambient odor concentrations. Technical Program 3:00 PM Using Raw Materials Balance to Represent the Chemical Profile of a Group of Sources to Smooth the Collinearity Influence in CMB Applications Paper# 904 Jose Gustavo da Costa, Joao Bosco Reis da Silva, ArcelorMittal Tubarao; Rogerio Silveirade Queiroz, Tsutomu Morimoto, Morimoto & Queiroz Consultoria em Poluicao do Ar Ltda Panelists: • Steven Trabue, USDA Agricultural Research Service 2:20 PM Role of Wind-Blown Dust, Biomass Burning, and Anthropogenic Aerosol in Climate Change Paper# 1236 Zinyi Dong, Joshua Fu, and Kan Huang, University of Tennessee at Knoxville • Kaitlyn Maxwell, Greenberg Traurig LLP • Raymond Porter, Porter Odor Science • Charles McGinley, St. Croix Sensory Inc. • Kathy Russo, Jefferson Parish Environmental • Larry Hottenstein, ERM New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 75 Wednesday, June 22 2:00 PM Sky-LOSA Measurements of Black Carbon Emission Factors from Associated Gas Flaring in Ecuador Paper# 1094 Bradley M. Conrad, Darcy J. Corbin, A. Melina Jefferson, and Matthew R. Johnson, Carleton University, Ottawa, ON, Canada TECHNICAL SESSIONS Boiler and Engine MACT Implementation The panel discussion topics include: Track: INDU Room: Bolden 6 • Comparison of baseline water sampling programs around the U.S. Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 1:40 PM Platform – TCC: IFB Chair: Brian Adair, Geosyntec • Naturally Occurring Radioactive Materials (NORM) in oil & gas operations 1:40 PM Unmasking and Understanding the Reciprocating Internal Combustion Engine Paper# 844 Lance Green, PPM Consultants Inc. 2:00 PM Experiences with Conducting One-Time Energy Assessments Paper# 895 Joshua D. Marteny, Tiffany L. Dillow, and Greg Gromicko, Zephyr Environmental Corporation 2:20 PM Coming to a MACT Near You Paper# 899 Kerry Brouillette and Jennifer Tullier, CK Associates 2:40 PM Improved SO2 Capture with High Reactivity Hydrated Lime DSI Paper# 1122 Pat Mongoven, Mississippi Lime Oil & Gas Operations - Waste and Water Management Track: O&GS/WAST Room: Strand 12B Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 1:40 PM Panel – TCC: WMR2 Chair: Michael Waguespack, Waldemar S. Nelson Vice Chair: Barbara Denson, Weston Solutions Panel# 862 The panel presentations and discussions will address the management of wastes and water in oil & gas exploration and production (E&P) operations throughout the United States. Panelists include an operating company, environmental consultants, and an environmental interest group. The regulatory framework for the management of wastes and water was developed in the 1970’s and 1980’s by EPA and various oil & gas producing States. The emergence of hydraulic fracturing operations in many States in the U.S has increased the interest of local communities in the management of wastes and water from oil & gas operations. 76 Final Program • Water and Waste management in hydraulic fracturing operations • Remediation of oilfield wastes. These topics relate to various aspects of water and wastes associated with oil & gas E&P operations. The presentations will provide timely information on the regulatory framework and the science associated with the management of water and wastes in these operations. Panelists: • George King, Apache Corporation • Ryan Leatherbury, Weston Solutions • Dan Mueller, Environmental Defense Fund • Steve Birdwell, Remedial Construction Services, L.P. Clean Air Act Compliance Issues Track: REGU Room: Strand 13B Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 1:40 PM Platform – TCC: REG8 Chair: David Jordan, ERM 1:40 PM Recent Regulatory and Legal Developments Impacting Environmental Compliance Paper# 902 John King, Breazeale, Sachse & Wilson, LLP 2:00 PM Emergency Engine Use in Electricity Demand Response Programs Paper# 1133 Neil Ramchandani, Conor Braman and Scott Osbourn, ERM 2:20 PM Air Permit Compliance and Environmental Reporting Work Processes Using Information Management Systems Paper# 922 Mona Hazur, CH2M; Jillian Bricher, The Dow Chemical Company 2:40 PM Going Clear: How EPA's Transparency Trend Impacts Environmental Compliance Paper# 901 John King, Breazeale, Sachse & Wilson, LLP TECHNICAL SESSIONS Sustainability Management Panelists: Track: SUST Room: Strand 12A • Ken Holmes, ExxonMobil Baton Rouge Refinery Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 1:40 PM Platform – TCC: SUS1 Chair: Thomas Morahan, Greystone Environmental Management Vice Chair: Rishi Kanabar 1:40 PM An Application of Sustainable Lean and Green Strategy with a Six Sigma Approach on a Manufacturing System Paper# 812 Matthew Franchetti and Shelia Fatemi, The University of Toledo 2:00 PM Environmental Health Safety and Sustainability Systems Procurement and Implementation: a Step by Step Review Paper# 1189 Thomas Morahan, Greystone Environmental Management, LLC • Allyson Morales, Americas Styrenics LLC • Robert Dupont, Utah State University • Louis Theodore, Theodore Tutorials • Representative from Nucor Steel Louisiana (invited) 2:40 PM The Role of Unit Operations in Environmental Engineering Paper# 814 Robert Dupont, Utah State University; Louis Theodore, Theodore Tutorials The Revised Risk Management Plan Modernization Rule - What it Means to Industry 2:40 PM Plastic, the Abundant, Sinister, Silent Threat to Humanity The Pollutant No One Talks About! Paper# 1131 Jim Berry and Dave Hinton, JD Energy, LLC 2:40 PM Environmental Management System Challenges Associated with Regulatory and Financial Factors Paper# 1277 Chris Hurst, EarthCon Consultants Inc What’s That Thang? - Industries - #2 Sponsored by CK Associates Track: YPRO Room: Bolden 1 Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 1:40 PM Panel – TCC: CHE6 Chair: Robert LeBlanc, CK Associates Industry representatives will explain how their processes work, providing an overview of the industry/process, discuss common emission sources, regulatory challenges and give a brief look at the future of their industry. Industries covered will include specialty chemicals and oil refining. All presenters will follow the same agenda, allowing attendees to make comparisons across industries. This is a great introductory panel presentation for all attendees but is focused on reaching the student/young professional attendee. As directed by Executive Order, EPA plans to roll out the final version of revised Risk Management Plan (RMP) requirements in 2016. The revisions will affect all current RMP elements and will add new substances, as well as reduce thresholds for existing covered substances. Similar efforts are underway at the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to strengthen the Process Safety Management (PSM) program. It is expected that over 10,000 facilities will be affected, primarily in the petrochemical refining, manufacturing, and forest product industries. For some of the facilities, the changes could be significant requiring implementation of new management systems and revisions in engineering standards, all of which takes strategic planning and time for compliance. Many other facilities currently not covered under the regulation will also face challenges in implementing and integrating new systems to their operations. Panelists with extensive RMP and PSM experience will provide diverse perspectives. The panelists will discuss technical contents of the regulations, legal aspects, and real world impacts to industry in implementing and assuring compliance with the revised requirements. Panelists: • Arijit Pakrasi, CB&I • Christine Kurtz, 3M • Matt Paulson, Bracewell LLP New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 77 Wednesday, June 22 Panel# 1037 Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 4:00 PM Panel – TCC: RAM1 Chair: Heidi Rous, ESA PCR Vice Chair: Scott Weaver, ERM Technical Program Mini-Symposium Room: Strand 10A/B TECHNICAL SESSIONS Biofiltration and Other Methods for Air Pollution Control Track: AQCT Room: Strand 12A Emission Factor Development #2 Track: AQES Room: Bolden 2 Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 4:00 PM Platform – TCC: AAC3 Chair: Mohan Balagopalan, SCAQMD Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 4:00 PM Platform – TCC: AAE4 Chair: Stephen Boone, RTI International Vice Chair: Chun Yi Wu, Minnesota Pollution Control Agency 4:00 PM Biodegradation of Gaseous Chloroform in a Trickle Bed Air Biofilter Under Acidic Conditions Paper# 834 Keerthisaranya Palanisamy and Bineyam Mezgebe, University of Cincinnati; Endalkachew Sahle-Demessie, EPA; George Sorial, University of Cincinnati 4:00 PM Real World Vehicle Emission Characterization in Ft. McHenry Tunnel Paper# 1140 Andrey Khlystov, David Campbell, Mark McDaniel, Anna Cunningham, Deep Sengupta, Barbara Zielinska and Chiranjivi Bhattarai, Desert Research Institute 4:20 PM Evaluating the Biodegradation of a Ternary Mixture of TCE, Methanol and Toluene in A Biotrickling Filter Paper# 848 Dhawal Chheda and George Sorial, University of Cincinnati 4:20 PM Modeling Texas Emission Factors Considering Pavement Roughness Using On-board Emission Measurement Paper# 1195 Qing Li, Fengxiang Qiao and Lei Yu, Texas Southern University 4:40 PM Evaluation of Aerobic and Anaerobic Bio Trickling Filter for the Removal of Chloroform Paper# 868 Bineyam Mezgebe and George Sorial, University of Cincinnati; Endalkachew Sahle-Demessie, EPA 4:40 PM Quantifying Vehicular Emission Factors with the Impact of Lane-changing Behavior on Different Types of Weaving Segment of Freeways Paper# 959 Fengxiang Qiao, Mahreen Nabi and Lei Yu, Texas Southern University 5:00 PM Strategies for Treating Hydrogen Sulfide in Biogas Paper# 869 Rakesh Govind, University of Cincinnati 5:20 PM Adsorption and Desorption Performance of Cross-Linked Porous Polymers Paper# 1118 Mohsen Ghafari and John Atkinson, University at Buffalo 78 Final Program 5:00 PM Update on Cold Start, Hot Start, and Idling Emissions in Northern Utah Paper# 1101 Randal Martin and Clay Woods, Utah State University CEE UWRL; Joe Thomas, Weber State University NCAST TECHNICAL SESSIONS Measurement of Emissions from Industrial Point Sources Particulate Matter - Methods, Speciation & Analysis #2 Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 4:00 PM Platform – TCC: AAE3 Chair: Leonard Nelms, Nelms Environmental Science & Technology Vice Chair: Antony Chen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas/Desert Research Institute Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 4:00 PM Platform – TCC: APP2 Co-Chair: Michael Meyer, Partilogical, LLC Co-Chair: Juan Carlos Ramirez-Dorronsoro, Ball State University Track: AQMM Room: Strand 11B Track: AQMM Room: Bolden 5 4:00 PM Analyses of Extreme Air Pollution Events Over Lahore Pakistan using Satellite and Ground Based Remote Sensing Paper# 884 Muhammad Imran Shahzad, Nadeem Iqbal Choudary and Kalim Ullah, Department of Meteorology COMSATS Institute of Information Technology 4:20 PM Increased Particulate Carbon Emissions During Powdered Activated Carbon Injection for Mercury Emissions Control: Optical and Physical Characterization Paper# 1150 Herek L Clack and Tian Xia, University of Michigan 4:40 PM Role of Gas Flaring from Russia’s Oil and Gas Production in Triggering High Black Carbon Episodes over the Arctic Paper# 1237 Kan Huang and Joshua Fu, University of Tennessee 4:40 PM Emission Testing Challenges, Comparison of Stack Test Results to Emission Limits and the Effectiveness of Best Practices Paper# 1090 Kevin Crosby, Montrose Air Quality Services LLC 5:20 PM Measuring HCl Using Hot/Wet Extractive FTIR CEMS Paper# 913 Jim Cornish and Mirja Maja, Gasmet Technologies, Antti Heikkila, Gasmet Europe Oy 5:00 PM Analysis of Polar and Non-polar Brown Carbon Organic Species Emitted from Peat Fuel Combustion Under Controlled Conditions Paper# 1258 Vera Samburova, Reddy L. N. Yatavelli, Madhu Gyawali, Adam Watts, Joseph Knue, Anna Cunningham, Jessica Connolly, Andrey Khlystov, Hans Moosmuller, and Barbara Zielinska, Desert Research Institute; Rajan K. Chakrabarty, Washington University in St. Louis 5:20 PM Neural Structure Model to Estimate a Time-Series of Forest Fire Incidents Using Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) and MODIS Data Paper# 1108 Haryo Tomo, Rizki Pratiwi, Brent Holben, Puji Lestari, Environmental Engineering ITB 5:40 PM The Use of Air Quality Models in the Assessment of Air Quality Impact from Concrete Batch Plants Paper# 1078 Edgar Velez, Alejandra Quinchia, Esteban Echeverri, Oscar Duque and Santiago Gomez F., EYC Global New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 79 Wednesday, June 22 5:00 PM Monitoring of Ambient Air Mercury Concentration in Areas Surrounding a Sintering Plant and a Cement Plant in Taiwan Paper# 928 Jui-Chi Wang, Graduate Institute of Environmental Engineering National Taiwan University; Wen-Yen Cheng, Institute of Environmental Engineering and Management National Taipei University; Chien-Ping Chou, Industrial Technology Research Institute; Chao-heng Tseng, National Taipei University of Technology; Hsing-Cheng Hsi, National Taiwan University Technical Program 4:20 PM SO2 to SO3 Conversion Through a Gas Turbine and Guarantee Recommendations Paper# 842 Jordan Haywood, Ramesh Kagolanu and Kyan Ali, Siemens Energy, Inc. 4:00 PM Integrative Assessment of Black Carbon and Elemental Carbon Source Apportionment Findings for Europe and the United States Paper# 1137 Christopher Long and Nicole Briggs, Gradient TECHNICAL SESSIONS Human and Environmental Effects of Air Pollution Exposure Track: H&EE Room: Strand 11A Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 4:00 PM Platform – TCC: HEE3 Chair: Suresh Santanam, SU-Industrial Assessment Center Vice Chair: J.W. Morrow 4:00 PM Wintertime Indoor and Outdoor PM2.5 Northern Utah’s Cache Valley Paper# 1201 Randal Martin, Utah State University CEE; Kori Moore, Space Dynamics Laboratory 4:20 PM Can Air Pollution Sources Adversely Affect Soil and Vegetation Paper# 1204 Stephen Zemba, Sanborn, Head and Associates, Inc. 4:40 PM Ecosystem Trends in Trace Substance Concentrations over an 85-Year Projection Paper# 1184 Leonard Levin and Bob Goldstein, EPRI 5:00 PM Effect of NH3 on the Formation of Indoor Secondary Organic Aerosols and Pulmonary Inflammation from Monoterpene/Ozone Reactions Paper# 917 Xinyi Niu, Xi'an Jiaotong University; Yu Huang, Kin Fai Ho and Junji Cao, Institute of Earth Environment, Chinese Academy of Sciences; Shuncheng Lee, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University Odor Modeling and Regulation Track: H&EE Room: Strand 13A Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 4:00 PM Platform – TCC: ODR3 Chair: Michael McGinley, St. Croix Sensory, Inc. Vice Chair: Anna Bokowa, Environmental Odour Consulting 4:00 PM Validating a Turbulence Transfer Based Approach to Quantify Odour Emissions from Waste Water Treatment Plants Paper# 918 Hong Liu, Dillon Consulting; Anna Bokowa, Environmental Odour Consulting 4:20 PM Preliminary Ambient Odor Monitoring: A Case Study of Two Wastewater Treatment Plants Paper# 1168 Poojitha Aleti and Abhinay Jilla, University of New Orleans; Aamani Kura, Louisiana State University / Marathon Petroleum Corporation; Amitdyuti Sengupta, Digital Engineering & Imaging inc / Jefferson Parish Public Health Department; Bhaskar Kura, University of New Orleans 4:40 PM Total Reduced Sulfur (TRS) CEMS Paper# 1112 Jeremy Whorton, Thermo Scientific 5:00 PM Odors: An Introduction, Sampling Techniques and Legal Considerations Paper# 886 Amy Pack Caffarella, Geosyntec Consultants; Kaitlyn R Maxwell, Greenberg Traurig LLP 5:20 PM Odor Management of Growing and Processing Cannabis (Marijuana) Paper# 847 Charles M McGinley, St. Croix Sensory Inc. Offshore Oil & Gas Environmental Assessments and Compliance Track: O&GS Room: Strand 12B Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 4:00 PM Panel – TCC: CHE7 Chair: Michael Waguespack, Waldemar S. Nelson Vice Chair: Alex Alvarado, Project Consulting Services The panel presentations and discussions will include an overview of Gulf of Mexico Outer Continental Shelf operators’ oil and gas activities by the Offshore Operators Committee (OOC) representative. An evaluation and compliance with NEPA and other environmental regulatory/policy guidelines associated with such activities will be discussed by a BOEM representative. Another representative from BOEM will give an update on the agency’s offshore sand management program. The topics include: • Update on OCS operators activities • Environmental assessment • Sand management and dredging operations impacts • Oil spill response capabilities in Gulf of Mexico. The topics will inform and update the regulated community on timely information regarding compliance and changes in offshore environmental protection. 80 Final Program TECHNICAL SESSIONS Wastewater/Residuals Beneficial Use, Treatment and Management Panelists: • Evan Zimmerman/ Greg Southworth, Offshore Operators Committee Track: WAST Room: Bolden 6 • Terri Thomas, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Gulf of Mexico OCS Region • Michael Miner, Ph.D., P.G., Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Gulf of Mexico OCS Region • T.J. Broussard, Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement Gulf of Mexico OCS Region (invited) • Frank Paskewich, Clean Gulf Associates Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 4:00 PM Platform – TCC: WMB4 Chair: Lee Lundberg, Bedrock Enterprises, Inc. Vice Chair: David Minott, Arc5 Environmental Consulting, LLC 4:00 PM Life Cycle Analysis of Biosolids to Fuels Paper# 824 Uisung Lee and Jeongwoo Han, Argonne National Laboratory Track: REGU Room: Strand 13B Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 4:00 PM Platform – TCC: REG9 Chair: Gary Saini, RTP Environmental Associates Inc. 4:00 PM Evaluating Greenhouse Gas BACT for Liquefied Natural Gas Facilities Paper# 1003 Nick Czarnecki, Janine Whitken and Bruce Wattle, Ecology and Environment Inc. 4:40 PM A Successful Approach for Obtaining a Permit By Rule (PBR) for an Innovative Project in Texas - A Case Study Paper# 1145 Christopher L. Campbell and Cynthia Hibbard, CDM Smith; Tom Jacobs and Sherri van der Wege, Trinity River Authority 4:20 PM Impacts of the New Ozone Standard on Air Quality Permitting Paper# 1042 Moha Parikh and Darcy Anderson, CH2M 5:00 PM Increasing the Fine Particulate Collection Efficiency of Existing Scrubbers without Increasing Pressure Drop: All it Takes is Water Paper# 908 F. Michael Lewis, F. Michael Lewis, Inc.; Lee A. Lundberg, Bedrock Enterprises, Inc.; David A. Hoecke, Enercon Systems, Inc. 4:40 PM Recent Trends in PSD Permitting - Evaluating Class II Visibility Impacts Paper# 1123 Don Caniparoli and John Frohning, CH2M 5:40 PM Groundwater Compliance with CCR Rule in the Mississippi River Floodplain Paper# 1100 Deborah C. Saxton, Michael A. Simms, Glen R. Landry, CB&I New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 81 Wednesday, June 22 5:00 PM Permitting Strategies - Benefits and Challenges Associated with Permitting Liquefied Natural Gas Facilities in Louisiana Paper# 1080 Miriam Hacker, Sarah Backes, and Linda Bartlett, ERM 5:20 PM The Implications of the Use of the Investigation Reporting Module (IRM) on Environmental Pollution in Abu Dhabi Emirate: Case Study of Illegal Sewage Discharge to the Marine Environment Paper# 1208 Humaid A. Al-Kindi, Suzan A. Al-Ghanem, Jasem Al-Shehhi, Environment Agency-Abu Dhabi; Mark B. Turner, Ahmed Rady, RTI International-Abu-Dhabi Technical Program 4:20 PM Energy Efficient Design of Low-Solids Anaerobic Digesters with Pillar-Aided Mixing Paper# 981 Sophia Ghanimeh, Notre Dame University-Louiaze, Lebanon; Daniel James Stoecklein and Baskar Ganapathysubramanian, Iowa State University New Source Review Case Studies TECHNICAL SESSIONS What’s That Thang? Control Devices Track: YPRO Room: Bolden 1 Wednesday, June 22, 2016, 4:00 PM Panel – TCC: AAC4 Chair: Jason Midgett, Placid Refining Company LLC This panel will provide both a general overview of control technologies currently available as well as a more in depth review of several specific pollutant control strategies including NOx, SOx, and VOC’s. The presenters will discuss control equipment design and operation requirements, an overview of the industry/ processes where used, and a review of the regulatory drivers 82 Final Program requiring the control or proposed regulations in the pipeline. This is a great introductory panel presentation for all attendees but is focused on reaching the student/young professional attendee. The attendee should walk away with a general understanding of control options available today for use in various applications with focus on the criteria pollutants. Panelists: • Sean Kirkpatrick, Vapor Point • Paul Farber, P. Farber Associates LLC • Bronwyn Graeffe, Marsulex Enviornmental Technologies • Christopher Wedig, CB&I TECHNICAL SESSIONS – THURSDAY DAILY SCHEDULE Thursday, June 23, 2016 Time Title Track Session Type Room 8:00-9:40 am Permitting in an Ozone Non-Attainment Area MINI platform Strand 10A/B 8:00-9:40 am Air Pollution Control Technologies AQCT panel Strand 13B 8:00-9:40 am Refinery Fenceline Monitoring & Data Collection AQMM/O&GS platform Strand 11B 8:00-9:40 am Data Requirements Rule and Attainment Modeling AQMO platform Bolden 5 8:00-9:40 am Future Proofing Cities through Local Climate Action Planning CLIM panel Strand 11A 8:00-10:00 am Risk Assessment/Management: Recent Experience H&EE platform Strand 13A 8:00-9:40 am Midstream Oil & Gas - Projects & Challenges O&GS panel Strand 12B 8:00-9:40 am International Air Quality Issues #1 REGU platform Bolden 2 8:00-9:40 am ISO 14001:2015 Revision - Implementation Challenges and Experiences REGU panel Bolden 1 8:00-9:40 am Vapor Intrusion and Regulatory Issues in Site Management WAST platform Bolden 6 Session Break 10:00-11:40 am Air Permitting Problems and Solutions MINI panel Strand 10A/B 10:00-11:40 am Air Pollution Control Applications AQCT platform Strand 13B 10:00-11:40 am Fugitive Dust AQES platform Bolden 1 10:00-11:40 am NASA's Satellite and Sub-Orbital Measurements and Models to Address AQMM panel Strand 11B Air Quality and Health Applications 10:00-11:40 am Oil & Gas Hydraulic Fracturing - Environmental Issues O&GS panel Strand 12B 10:00-11:40 am What Direction is EPA taking the Utility Sector? POWR panel Bolden 5 10:00-11:40 am Air Quality Regulatory Issues in Abu Dhabi REGU platform Bolden 2 10:00-11:40 am Sustainability Fundamentals: Principles, Standards, Models, SUST panel Strand 11A Metrics and Practice 10:00-11:40 am Site Remediation - Groundwater, Soil and Sediment WAST platform Bolden 6 1:30-3:10 pm Permitting Case Studies MINI platform Strand 10A/B 1:30-3:30 pm International Air Quality Issues #2 AQMM platform Bolden 2 1:30-3:10 pm Particulate and Photochemical Modeling Issues and Studies AQMO platform Bolden 5 1:30-3:10 pm A&WMA Environmental Education Resource Guides EERG - EDUC panel Strand 13B Technical Program 9:40-10:00 am Train the Trainer Workshop 1:30-3:10 pm Air Quality Work in Indian Country FEDS/REGU panel Bolden 6 1:30-3:10 pm Advances in Nanoscale Science and Engineering and Regulation NANO panel Strand 13A of Nanotechnology 1:30-3:10 pm Hot Topics in the Chemical and Refining Industries O&GS platform Strand 11B 1:30-3:10 pm Oil & Gas Operations in Wetlands & Other Waters of the U.S. O&GS panel Strand 12B 3:10-3:30 pm Session Break 3:30-4:50 pm Air Toxics Regulations MINI panel Strand 10A/B 3:30-4:50 pm Control of Dust, Odor, and Indoor Air Pollution AQCT platform Strand 11A 3:30-4:50 pm Waste Management Work in Indian Country FEDS / WAST panel Bolden 6 3:30-4:50 pm Nanotechnology Science and Engineering NANO platform Strand 13A 3:30-4:50 pm Emissions Impacts and Control Technologies Related to Oil and O&GS platform Strand 11B Strand 12B Gas Exploration and Production Oil & Gas Environmental Litigation O&GS panel 3:30-4:50 pm Case Studies in Emission/Energy Reduction Strategies REGU platform 3:30-4:50 pm SILs and SMCs in NSR: What Lies Ahead for PM2.5 and Other Pollutants REGU / AQMO panel 4:50-6:00 pm Technical Council 2017 ACE Planning Meeting Strand 13B Bolden 5 New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 83 Thursday, June 23 3:30-4:50 pm TECHNICAL SESSIONS – THURSDAY, JUNE 23 Permitting in an Ozone Non-Attainment Area Track: Mini-Symposium Room: Strand 10A/B Thursday, June 23, 2016, 8:00 AM Platform – TCC: REG10 Chair: Karen Brignac, PPM Consultants, Inc. Vice Chair: Lance Green, PPM Consultants, Inc. 8:00 AM New Ozone NAAQS Impacts on Industry and Challenges in Permitting Paper# 986 Arijit Pakrasi and Chris Howard, CB&I 8:20 AM Staying in the Zone: Cross-State Challenges to Address Ozone Nonattainment Paper# 1022 Jeremy Kriger, Langan Engineering and Environmental Services, Inc. 8:40 AM Greenfield Permitting in an Ozone Nonattainment Area A Case Study Paper# 1128 Dustin Duhon, Providence Engineering and Environmental Group 9:00 AM Growing Shortage of Emission Reduction Credits in Northeast and Gulf Coast and Impact of 2015 NAAQS Paper# 858 Michael Taylor, Emission Advisors Air Pollution Control Technologies Track: AQCT Room: Strand 13B Thursday, June 23, 2016, 8:00 AM Panel – TCC: AAC5 Chair: Minh Pham, SCAQMD Vice Chair: Arijit Pakrashi, CB&I Under the Clean Air Act the EPA establishes national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) for six common air pollutants including carbon monoxide, ground level ozone, lead, nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, and particulate matter (PM10 and PM2.5) to protect public health and the environment. In parallel with this effort, the EPA, States and local air pollution agencies have developed and set increasingly stringent emission standards to reduce the emissions of these pollutants, as well as volatile organic compound (VOC), a precursor of ozone, and other types of acid gases from numerous types of industrial sources. In this session, the panel will discuss the applications design and performance levels of control technologies such as selective catalytic reduction wet and dry gas scrubbers thermal and catalytic inciinerators baghouses and electrostatic precipitators used in refineries power plants chemical and other industrial plants. 84 Final Program Panelists: • Minh Pham, SCAQMD • Rod Gravley, Tri-Mer • Arijit Pakrasi, CB&I • John McKenna, ETS Inc. Refinery Fenceline Monitoring & Data Collection Track: AQMM/O&GS Room: Strand 11B Thursday, June 23, 2016, 8:00 AM Platform – TCC: AAM7 Chair: Lee Marotta, PerkinElmer Vice Chair: Mark Modrak, AECOM 8:00 AM Continuous Refinery Fenceline Air Monitoring Program Using Open-Path Ultraviolet Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy UV-DOAS Paper# 1010 Mark Modrak, AECOM 8:20 AM Fenceline Monitoring Considerations Under the Refinery RTR Rule Paper# 1207 Brian A Cochran, AECOM 8:40 AM Complying with EPA Method 325 Fenceline Monitoring at Refineries: Fast, Accurate, Precise Paper# 1241 Lee Marotta, PerkinElmer; Roberta Provost, Amy Jacobson and Nathan Eklund, Pace Analytical Services 9:00 AM Petroleum Refinery Fenceline Monitoring Pitfalls and Implications to Site Specific Monitoring Plans Paper# 1435 Eric Hodek, Arcadis Data Requirements Rule and Attainment Modeling Track: AQMO Room: Bolden 5 Thursday, June 23, 2016, 8:00 AM Platform – TCC: APM7 Chair: Dave Heinold, AECOM Vice Chair: Gale Hoffnagle, TRC Environmental Corporation 8:00 AM Mid-2016 Progress Report: Implementation of the 1-hour SO2 NAAQS Paper# 934 Bob Paine, David W. Heinold, and William Looney, AECOM TECHNICAL SESSIONS 8:20 AM Sulfur Dioxide Attainment Demonstrations Paper# 1127 Kevin Calhoun, Providence Engineering and Environmental Group LLC climate hazards, a deep analysis and ranking of current climate related risks is included. Once the baseline analysis is completed, local governments are engaged to establish a range of goals focused on GHG/air pollutant emissions reduction, community health index improvements, water conservation, energy efficiency/ conservation, sustainability, and climate risk reduction. This Panel Session will discuss this approach to future proofing and provide important lessons learned through case studies with two regional government associations – San Bernardino Associated Governments (SANBAG), and the South Bay Cities Council of Governments (SBCCOG). 8:40 AM Meeting the Challenges of AERMOD Modeling in Complex Terrain for the 1-hour SO2 NAAQS Paper# 1129 Anthony J. Sadar and Jason Maranche, Allegheny County Health Department Panelists: 9:00 AM A Case Study of Sulfur Dioxide in Muscatine, Iowa and the Ability for AERMOD to Predict NAAQS Violations Paper# 1097 Charlene Becka, Wenck Associates Inc. • Michael Hendrix, LSA Associates • Sarah Favrot, LSA Associates • Zhe Chen, LSA Associates Risk Assessment/Management: Recent Experience 1 Track: H&EE Room: Strand 13A Thursday, June 23, 2016, 8:00 AM Platform – TCC: RAM2 Chair: Scott Weaver, ERM Vice Chair: Heidi Rous, ESA PCR Future Proofing Cities Through Local Climate Action Planning Track: CLIM Room: Strand 11A Thursday, June 23, 2016, 8:00 AM Panel – TCC: CCI1 Chair: Michael Hendrix, LSA Associates Local governments across the United States are being urged by community members to prioritize sustainable growth through local jobs, improved quality of life, and clean energy. At the same time, cities and counties must address real risks to their communities, particularly climate hazards and resource scarcities. Climate and clean energy planning has the potential to address these needs simultaneously. Administrators must be deliberate about how these plans are developed and applied to ensure community buy-in and prioritization of implementable strategies for change. 8:00 AM Impacts of Emission Changes on Air Quality and Acute Health Effects in the Southeast, 1993-2012 Paper# 851 Lucas Henneman, Yongtao Hu, Cong Liu, James Mulholland and Armistead Russell, Georgia Institute of Technology 8:20 AM Stakeholder Engagement and Health Impact Assessment: Tools for Managing Non-Technical Risk Paper# 1240 M. Scott Weaver, Sharon June Quiring and Kristina Mitchell, ERM 8:40 AM Safety Competency and Leadership: A Case Study Paper# 990 Pat Brush, Air Liquide; Viki Young, Air Liquide Engineering & Construction New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 85 Thursday, June 23 The future proofing approach to climate and clean energy planning for local governments is one founded in technically-sound baseline analysis. The process typically starts with an inventory of energy use, water consumption, emissions, community health, economic activities, and forecast based on specific growth scenarios. Complementary to that baseline analysis is comprehensive stakeholder engagement and policy review to document community priorities, constraints/obstacles, incentives, and best management practices. It can also include an economic analysis of existing clean energy companies and/or projects or a renewable energy resource assessment. For communities particularly focused on Technical Program 9:20 AM Lessons Learned from the 1-Hour SO2 SIP Modeling Activities at a Large Electric Utility Paper# 1214 David J. Long and Ashley N. Ullstrom, American Electric Power Service Corporation TECHNICAL SESSIONS 9:00 AM Sources of PM2.5 with High Oxidative Potential Linked to Health Effects Paper# 1066 Josephine Bates, Georgia Institute of Technology; Joseph Abrams and Howard Chang, Emory University; Ting Fang, Georgia Institute of Technology; Mitchel Klein, Emory University; James Mulholland and Armistead Russell, Georgia Institute of Technology; Stefanie Sarnat and Paige Tolbert, Emory University; Vishal Verma, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Rodney Weber, Georgia Institute of Technology 9:20 AM Evaluation of Legionella Pneumophila Contamination in Building Water Systems by Quantitative PCR and Standard Culture Paper# 1117 John R Kominsky, Environmental Quality Management Inc. 9:40 AM How the Changing Nature of Risk Assessment Guidelines Impacts Large Industrial Sources Paper# 1223 Jeffrey Baldino, Laura Davis and Danny Kringel, ERM Midstream Oil & Gas – Projects & Challenges Track: O&GS Room: Strand 12B Thursday, June 23, 2016, 8:00 AM Panel – TCC: CHE8 Chair: Michael Waguespack, Waldemar S. Nelson Vice Chair: Richard Leonhard, Project Consulting Services, Inc. This panel will review Midstream Operations and challenges, specifically addressing the ecological, environmental, cultural, and administrative sensitive features associated with the initiation and implementation of Midstream Projects. The focus will be how the regulations associated with these features ultimately influence the construction schedule and design aspects of a project. Our experienced panelists include an oil & gas industry representative, a State regulator, and consultants (Biologist, Archeologist, & Environmental Engineer). The topics include: • Industry Overview • Project Overview • Ecological Features (Wetlands, T&E Species) • Cultural Features (Archeological, Historical) • Permitting These topics relate directly to project issues and concerns for Midstream Operations. The presentations will provide timely information on the issues associated with these operations. 86 Final Program Panelists: • Sean Atkins, Enlink Midstream • Robert Ganczak, Project Consulting Services, Inc. • Kyle Balkum, Louisiana Department of Wildlife & Fisheries • James Eberwine, R. Christopher Goodwin & Associates, Inc. • Anica Haynes, Geosyntec Consultants, Inc. International Air Quality Issues #1 Track: REGU Room: Bolden 2 Thursday, June 23, 2016, 8:00 AM Platform – TCC: REG11 Chair: Christina Akly, NextEra Energy 8:00 AM One Size Does Not Fit All: An Alternative Way to Evaluate GHG Emissions Reductions Paper# 964 Ahmed Rady, RTI International; Salem Al Braik and Mohammad Alam, Environment Agency Abu Dhabi; Leslie Bellas and Robert Zerbonia, RTI International 8:20 AM Vehicular Restriction Program and its Potential Impact in Ozone Air Quality at the Mexico City Metropolitan Zone Paper# 1034 Pablo Sanchez, Humberto Bravo and Rodolfo Sosa, University of Mexico; Monica Jaimes and Armando Retama, Secretaria del Medio Ambiente 8:40 AM Cost-Benefit Analysis of Emission Control Measures for Non-Road Equipment in China Paper# 1147 Kaishan Zhang, Kaili Pang, Baofeng Di, Zhen Li, Fan Wang and Ziyuan Xia, Sichuan University, China 9:00 AM Integrated Environmental Impact Assessment of Industrial Pollutants using TRACI Paper# 1250 Indira Parajuli and Heekwan Lee, School of Urban and Environmental Engineering, Incheon National University, Republic of Korea 9:20 AM Emissions Standards Development in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi Paper# 969 Ahmed Rady, RTI International; Mohammad Alam, Environment Agancy Abu Dhabi; Robert Zerbonia and Leslie Bellas, RTI International; Salem Al Braik and Abdulla Al Rumaithi, Environment Agency Abu Dhabi TECHNICAL SESSIONS ISO 14001:2015 Revision - Implementation Challenges and Experiences Vapor Intrusion and Regulatory Issues in Site Management Thursday, June 23, 2016, 8:00 AM Panel – TCC: REG12 Chair: Daniel Schmid, E-Dan, LLC Thursday, June 23, 2016, 8:00 AM Platform – TCC: WMR3 Chair: Chris Lutes, CH2M Vice Chair: Todd Fracassi, Pepper Hamilton LLC Track: REGU Room: Bolden 1 Track: WAST Room: Bolden 6 Panelists: • Daniel Schmid, E-Dan, LLC • Gary McRae, DQS Inc. • Tara McCullen, Wenck Associates • Fred Kelly, 3M Company (Invited) 8:00 AM Two Case Studies of Aerated Floors for Vapor Intrusion Mitigation - One with Cupolex™ and One with Drainage Mat Paper# 999 Rebecca Daprato, Theodore E. Kuehster, Luke Fitzgerald, David Folkes and Todd McAlary, GeoSyntec Consultants; Rory Lane, BlueSphere Environmental Pty Ltd 8:20 AM Implementation of 2015 EPA Vapor Intrusion (VI) Guides: Application in State Programs Paper# 1141 Chris Lutes and John Lowe, CH2M 8:40 AM Not Your Father’s Due Diligence: Addressing Emerging Issues in Transactions Paper# 1138 Todd Fracassi and AnnMarie Sanford, Pepper Hamilton LLP Technical Program The ISO 14001 Environmental Management System (EMS) Standard revision was finalized and issued on September 15 2015. This revision is intended to address challenges presented in ISOs Future Challenges report and revise the structure of the standard to better align with Annex SL (a standard format for all ISO management systems standards going forward). Among the extensive significant format and content changes are the defining of the context of the organization inputs and outputs when setting the EMS Scope including needs of interested parties, driving environmental performance improvements, addressing the life cycle perspective, increased leadership engagement, expanded internal and external communications, expanding operational control requirements, and requiring risk based planning and control practices. This panel session will discuss these significant changes to this standard and the impacts challenges and experiences of organizations who have or are currently transitioning to the ISO 14001:2015 standard. 9:00 AM A Methodology for Listed Waste Code Determination at Soil Remediation Sites - Applications Paper# 971 Lupe Reynolds and Nadia Suhaka, AECOM Air Permitting Problems and Solutions Mini-Symposium Room: Strand 10A/B Thursday, June 23, 2016, 10:00 AM Panel – TCC: REG13 Chair: Paul Siebert, Weston Solutions, Inc. New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 87 Thursday, June 23 This panel will discuss permitting issues and permit conditions that are prone to problems from various industry, government, and environmentalist perspectives. Air pollutant emission sources are generally required to obtain construction and operating permits from State or local air quality agencies, or directly from the EPA. Generally, the issuing agency will provide an opportunity for a facility to review and comment on draft permit conditions. Taking advantage of that opportunity is essential to ensure the best permit that can be obtained. Particular permit conditions that may present problems are: inflexible conditions that do not provide for real world variations; emission limitations that cannot be routinely or consistently achieved in practice; monitoring, recordkeeping, and reporting conditions that require excessive TECHNICAL SESSIONS effort; and stack testing requirements that are of questionable value yet costly. These and others may require substantial effort, yet produce little environmental benefit. On the other hand, permitting agencies and environmental advocacy groups may perceive different problems with permit conditions. The panel will discuss alternative conditions and other remedies for problem permit conditions. Although modification of permit conditions is within the exclusive purview of the permitting agency, permitting agency personnel may have little familiarity with local issues or the difficulty of complying with some permit conditions. Facility personnel should strive to explain inherent difficulties and costs with some permit conditions, so they can be changed when in draft or final form. Similarly, the public should take advantage of its opportunities to inquire and comment on a proposed permit based on their familiarity with the locality or specific issues. Panelists: • Mark Wejkszner, Pennsylvia DEP (invited) • Tiffany L. Dillow, Zephyr Environmental Corporation • Timothy Titus, The Boeing Company (invited) 11:00 AM Value of Integrating Air Regulatory Compliance and Air Pollution Control With Business Strategies Paper# 1092 Ravi Bhatia, Chris Rodgers and Mike Adams, Antea Group 11:20 AM Photocatalytic Removal of NOx over a-Bi2O3/(BiO)2CO3 Heterojunctions with Tunable Activity Paper# 882 Yu Huang, Wei Wang, and Junji Cao, Institute of Earth Environment Chinese Academy of Sciences Fugitive Dust Track: AQES Room: Bolden 1 Thursday, June 23, 2016, 10:00 AM Platform – TCC: APP3 Chair: Rob Farber, Atmospheric Clarity Vice Chair: Prakash Doraiswamy, RTI International Track: AQCT Room: Strand 13B 10:00 AM Environmental Forensic Investigation of Surface Particulates in a Residential Community Allegedly from Foundry Fugitive Emissions Paper# 875 John R. Kominsky, Environmental Quality Management Inc. Thursday, June 23, 2016, 10:00 AM Platform – TCC: AAC6 Chair: Minh Pham, SCAQMD Vice Chair: Hardik Shah, Southern Environmental Inc. 10:20 AM Dust Control During Demolition of a Lead Facility Paper# 1027 Karen Brignac, PPM Consultants Inc. 10:00 AM Oxidizers, Flares, Activated Carbon and Other VOC Controls Paper# 818 Thomas F. McGowan, TMTS Associates Inc. 10:40 AM Silencing Wind Blown Dust in the Western Mojave Desert by Implementing Dustbuster Developed Mitigation Strategies Paper# 1070 Rob Farber, Atmospheric Clarity; Chatten Cowherd, MRI Global; Tom Zink and Michelle Cloud-Hughes, San Diego State University; Earl Roberts and Rick Roberts, RES Environmental Inc.; Richard J. Countess, Countess Environmental; Paul Nguyen and Hudson Minshew, USDA Natural Resources Conservation District; Alan De Salvio, Brett Banks and Vicki Rausch, Antelope Valley AQMD; Rich Campbell, Antelope Valley Resource Conservation District; Lloyd Doster, Agricultural Consultant; Dan Foster and Steve Pawling, Honda R&D Americas, Inc.; Sean Irwin, Organic Spreading; Andrew Noga, City of Lancaster; Don Newton, Antelope Acres Community Participant; Tammy Yamasaki, Southern California Edison Company; Julie Schuder, Antelope Valley Dust Control Group • Gary McCutchen, RTP Environmental Associates, Inc. (invited) Air Pollution Control Applications 10:20 AM Sulfite Oxidation in Flue Gas Scrubbing —A Tutorial Using Literature Data Paper# 952 Robert G. Kunz, RGK Environmental Consulting L.L.C. 10:40 AM Commercial Operation of Electrostatic Precipitator High Frequency Energization in Intermittent Energization Mode at Labadie Energy Center Units 1 & 2 Paper# 1012 David E. Boll and Nicolas Pelech, Ameren Missouri; P. E. Mick Chambers and Hardik Shah, Southern Environmental Inc.; Gary J. Grieco, Air Consulting Associates, LLC 88 Final Program 11:00 AM Regional Fugitive Dust Monitoring Approach for Solar Power Plants Paper# 1433 Andres Quijano, Rob Beckius and Joe Palumbo, American Ecotech TECHNICAL SESSIONS 11:20 AM Character of Chemical Components of Urban Fugitive Dust in North China Paper# 915 Jian Sun, Zhenxing Shen, Qian Zhang, Yali Lei, Jiyang Zhou, Hongmei Xu and Chunli Zheng, Xi'an Jiaotong University; Junji Cao, Suixin Liu, R. J. Huang and Chongshu Zhu, Institute of Earth Environment, Chinese Academy of Sciences; Leiming Zhang, Environment Canada Oil & Gas Hydraulic Fracturing Environmental Issues Track: O&GS Room: Strand 12B Thursday, June 23, 2016, 10:00 AM Panel – TCC: CHE9 Chair: Michael Waguespack, Waldemar S. Nelson Vice Chair: Richard Leonhard, Project Consulting Services, Inc. This panel will address environmental issues associated with the hydraulic fracturing process that is used to develop and produce oil & gas in many States in the U.S. Panelists include a State geological agency, consultants and an environmental interest group. The use of this technology has sparked interest and opposition in local communities throughout the U.S. NASA’s Satellite and Sub-Orbital Measurements and Models to Address Air Quality and Health Applications Track: AQMM Room: Strand 11B The topics include: Thursday, June 23, 2016, 10:00 AM Panel – TCC: PUB2 Chair: Ali Omar, NASA Vice-Chair: Shobhana Gupta, NASA HQ • Description of hydraulic fracturing process NASA studies the Earth using current and future spacecraft helping answer critical challenges facing our planet climate change sea level rise freshwater resources and extreme weather events and societal challenges such as public health and air quality. As an innovation leader in Earth and climate science NASA views our planet from space with an exceptional team of experts and decades of innovative scientific and technical research. This session brings together satellite data providers and data users to identify meaningful climate and environmental data and products and to share ideas about maximizing the use of satellite data for societal benefit. The NASA Applied Sciences Program (ASP) within its Public Health and Air Quality (PHAQ) focus area sponsors satellite data applications across a wide spectrum of areas including environmental health infectious disease air quality standards policies and regulations and the impact of climate change on health and air quality. PHAQ encourages the use of Earth observations in air quality management and public health by periodically issuing calls for proposals to academia public and private sectors and emphasizing partnerships between scientists and communities of application such as managers, policy and decision makers. The area also addresses effects of climate change on air quality and public health to support managers in decision making. • State regulatory viewpoint • Community outreach • Opposition to the use of this technology. These topics relate to various aspects of oil & gas hydraulic fracturing operations. The presentations will provide timely information on the environmental issues associated with these operations. Technical Program • Economic impacts of this technology Panelists: • Charlotte Batson, Tuscaloosa Energy Services • John E. Johnston, III, Louisiana Geological Survey (invited) • Carla J. Kinslow, Ph.D., Rimkus Consulting Group • Eric Smith, Tulane University Energy Institute • Lisa W. Jordan, Tulane Environmental Law Clinic Panelists: • Ali Omar, NASA • John A. Haynes, NASA HQ • Luca Delle Monache, NCAR • Maria Tzortziou, City College of New York Thursday, June 23 New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 89 TECHNICAL SESSIONS What Direction is EPA Taking the Utility Sector? Track: POWR Room: Bolden 5 Thursday, June 23, 2016, 10:00 AM Panel – TCC: PWR4 Chair: Peter Belmonte, TRC Solutions Vice Chair: Rick Johnson, Entergy We all know that the EPA has placed a huge target on the back of the Power Sector over the last 5 years. Some of EPA’s rules have been delayed by litigation and the Clean Power Plan (CPP) has been stayed per a Supreme Court determination that is now up in the air due to Justice Scalia’s recent passing. Natural gas prices continue to fall thereby disrupting coal fired units. RTCs get approved for another 5 years keeping renewables in play. Significant capital investment will be necessary for compliance for some rules whereas compliance with other rules may be less expensive. Planning will be the key to maintaining compliance with all these regulatory standards (SMS, GHGs, SO2 NAAQS, Ozone, CWA 316b) as EPA drives technology to the limit. What direction are these new rules taking the utility sector? We will evaluate this by having representatives from Independent Power Producers (IPPs), Utilities, and regulatory agencies provide their thoughts on these issues. Panelists: • Peter Belmonte, TRC Solutions • Brian Kolts, FirstEnergy Corp • Justin Walters, Southern Company • Rick Johnson, Entergy • Rich Alonso, Bracewell & Guiliani • Mark Johnson, TRC Air Quality Regulatory Issues in Abu Dhabi Track: REGU Room: Bolden 2 Thursday, June 23, 2016, 10:00 AM Platform – TCC: REG14 Chair: Mark Turner, RTI International Vice Chair: Ahmed Rady, RTI International 10:00 AM Environmental Monitoring Reports for Power and Desalination Plants Abu Dhabi Emirate Paper# 1035 Zied Bousserouel and Fadi Elayyan, RTI International-Abu Dhabi; Omar Ahmad Al-Braiki, Environment Agency-Abu Dhabi 90 Final Program 10:20 AM Process Design Criteria in the Specific Conditions of EAD Environmental Permits for Industrial Facilities Paper# 1040 Zied Bousserouel, Hani Abdalla, and Saif Al Dulaimi, RTI International-Abu Dhabi; Maha Abdulkhaleq Al Yafei, Environment Agency Abu Dhabi 10:40 AM Implementation of the Holistic Compliance and Enforcement System and the Judicial Referral of the First Case in Abu Dhabi Paper# 984 Mark B. Turner and Ahmed S. Rady, RTI International-Abu Dhabi; Jesse Baskir, RTI International; Khalid Al Hajeri and Ahmed Al Waheebi, Environment Agency-Abu Dhabi 11:00 AM Benchmarking of Environment Agency Environmental Protection Program in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi with the Different Environmental Programs in the United States Paper# 1011 Hani Abdalla and Ahmed S. Rady, RTI International-Abu Dhabi; Jesse Baskir, RTI International; Faisal Al Hammadi and Khalid Al Hajeri, Environment Agency-Abu Dhabi 11:20 AM Environmental Inspections Trend Analysis as a Tool to Improve Compliance and Enforcement Program Paper# 1020 Senathipathi Kalimuthu, Mark Turner, Samer Akl, Ahmed S. Rady, and Mohammed Al Ashram, RTI International-Abu Dhabi; Ahmed Al Waheebi, Khalid Al Hajeri, Naser H. Alkaaf and Abdulla H. Alhosani, Environment Agency-Abu Dhabi Sustainability Fundamentals - Principles, Standards, Models, Metrics, and Practice Track: SUST Room: Strand 11A Thursday, June 23, 2016, 10:00 AM Panel – TCC: SUS2 Chair: Ashley Sapyta, S&ME Inc. Vice Chair: Thomas Morahan, Greystone Environmental Management On their website the U.S. EPA offers the following comments on sustainability, Everything that we need for our survival and well-being depends, either directly or indirectly, on our natural environment. To pursue sustainability is to create and maintain the conditions under which humans and nature can exist in productive harmony to support present and future generations. The United Nations has adopted 17 sustainable development goals which touch on environmental protection but also include other topics such as no poverty, quality education, reduced inequalities, and peace and justice. These goals are tied to over 150 proposed targets TECHNICAL SESSIONS and over 300 proposed indicators to demonstrate compliance. Although sustainability is a popular term for many organizations, the goals associated with sustainability and the metrics used to measure success vary widely. Accordingly, this Panel will discuss the state-of-the-art in sustainability practices and the likely evolutionary pathway for the sustainability concept in a variety of settings and applications. Representatives from the heavy manufacturing sector, the public utility sector, academia and a leading engineering-procurement-construction firm will each present their enterprise’s viewpoint on the meaning of sustainability and the paths for success in achieving philosophical breakthrough in the enterprise and, then, for increasing scope expansion and efficiencies… for making the program sustainable itself. Panelists: • Nancy Kralik, Fluor Corporation • Bhaskar Kura, University of New Orleans • Mark Bowles, Entergy • Keith Lindemulder, Nucor Site Remediation - Groundwater, Soil, and Sediment Track: WAST Room: Bolden 6 Thursday, June 23, 2016, 10:00 AM Platform – TCC: WMR4 Chair: Chris Lutes, CH2M Vice Chair: Stanford Lummus, S&ME Inc. 11:20 AM Hudson River PCBs Superfund Site Quality of Life Performance Standards: Site Air Monitoring Program Paper# 1068 Laurie Kutina, Ecology and Environment; Gary Klawinski, EPA Permitting Case Studies Track: Mini-Symposium Room: Strand 10A/B Thursday, June 23, 2016, 1:30 PM Platform – TCC: REG15 Chair: Karen Brignac, PPM Consultants, Inc. Vice Chair: Lance Green, PPM Consultants, Inc. 1:30 PM Permitting Combined Cycle Gas Turbine Project in Louisiana: A Case Study Paper# 997 Arijit Pakrasi, Christopher Howard and Deborah Saxton, CB&I; Renee Keyes, Entergy Services, Inc. Technical Program Important issues such as What does sustainability mean? What are options for corporate sustainability program structure? How can sustainability be measured? What are the benefits of adopting a sustainable approach to the enterprise? will be addressed. The Panel will also discuss the forward look of this topic by addressing What can sustainability mean? for an enterprise, for a business sector and for our culture. 11:00 AM Cement Products Used for the Solidification/Stabilization of Contaminated Soil Paper# 871 Paul Ruehl, LafargeHolcim 1:50 PM Ghosts of Air Permits Past Paper# 1002 Julie Hall, Cornerstone Environmental Group 2:10 PM Navigating the Minefield of Engine Air Regulations Paper# 1007 Scott Miller, Cornerstone Environmental Group 2:30 PM Environmental Permitting for Greenfield Industrial Projects Experiences and Lessons Learned Paper# 1060 Thomas Sullivan, Joshua D. Marteny, Jennifer Seinfeld and Karen Olson, Zephyr Environmental Corporation 10:00 AM Ozone Sparge Technology for Groundwater Remediation Paper# 1072 Michael Luckett, PPM Consultants Inc. 2:50 PM Permitting Greenfield Sites Paper# 1076 Brandon Mogan, Geosyntec Consultants Inc. 10:20 AM Remediation of Highly Fractured Rock Aquifer Using Air Sparging Paper# 838 Stanford Lummus, S&ME Inc. New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 91 Thursday, June 23 10:40 AM The Sustainability of Phytoremediation and Monitored Natural Attenuation for Groundwater Remediation, a Case Study BP Former Refinery - Sugar Creek, Missouri Paper# 900 Chris Pearson, AECOM TECHNICAL SESSIONS International Air Quality Issues #2 Track: AQMM Room: Bolden 2 Thursday, June 23, 2016, 1:30 PM Platform – TCC: AAE5 Chair: Leonard Nelms, Nelms Environmental Science & Technology Vice Chair: Asami Tanimoto, CDM Smith 1:30 PM Identifying Appropriate Chemical Mechanisms for Photochemical Air Quality Modelling in Arid Regions Paper# 940 Shareef Mohammed Mujtaba and Tahir Husain, Memorial University of Newfoundland 1:50 PM Adaptation of U.S. EPA’s Vehicle Emission Model MOVES to Mexico Paper# 1050 John Koupal, Allison DenBleyker, Scott Fincher and Sandeep Kishan, Eastern Research Group; Veronica Garibay-Bravo, ORG+CO; Cynthia Menendez and Ricardo Troncoso, USAID Mexico Low Emissions Development Program; Jose Andres Aguilar Gomez, Sergio Zirath Hernandez Villasenor, Instituto Nacional de Ecologia y Cambio Climatico 2:10 PM Reduction of Atmospheric Emissions by Changing from Fuel Oil to Natural Gas at a Power Plant in a Critical Zone in Mexico Paper# 1000 Rodolfo Sosa E., Humberto Bravo A., Ana Luisa Alarcon J., Maria del Carmen Torres B., Pablo Sanchez A., Sergio Rosas A., Evelin Mateos D. and Elias Granados H., Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico 2:30 PM Assessment of Impact of Marine Emissions of Ocean-going Vessels in a Major Port in India Paper# 975 Jhumoor Biswas, Anindita Mandal and Soma Roychowdhury, Indian Institute of Social Welfare and Business Management; Zuber Farooqui, California Air Resources Board 2:50 PM Emissions of Toxic and Climate Forcer Pollutants from Crop Residue Open Burning in Southeast Asia Paper# 977 Nguyen Thi Kim Oanh, Nguyen Phan Dong and Didin Agustian Permadi, Asian Institute of Technology, Thailand 92 Final Program 3:10 PM Emissions Inventory Development for the Mexico City Metropolitan Area: Two Decades of Improvement (1994 to 2014) Paper# 1016 Paula Fields Simms, Marty Wolf and Gopi Manne, Eastern Research Group; Diana Guzman Torres, Patricia Camacho Rodriguez, Petra Paz and Saira Mendoza, Secretary of the Environment, Government of the Federal District, Mexico City Particulate and Photochemical Modeling Issues and Studies Track: AQMO Room: Bolden 5 Thursday, June 23, 2016, 1:30 PM Platform – TCC: APM6 Chair: Bob Paine, AECOM Vice Chair: Pete Catizone, TRC Environmental Corporation 1:30 PM AERMOD PM10 Modeling in Central Sogamoso Valley as a Tool for Air Quality Decontamination Plan Paper# 1005 Santiago Gomez, Juan Camilo Baena, Esteban Echeverry, Carlos Mario Sepulveda and Jorge Alonso Montoya, EYC Global 1:50 PM Analysis for Wind Erodibility PST in the Port Area Cartagena (Colombia) Using AERMOD Paper# 1082 Alejandro Quinchia, Oscar Andres Duque, Esteban Echeverry, Alejandro Velez and Santiago Gomez, EYC Global 2:10 PM PM2.5 Permit Modeling Case Study - Challenges with Accounting for Secondary PM2.5 and Modeling NAAQS Compliance Paper# 893 Mary Kaplan, AECOM 2:30 PM Analyzing Weekday and Weekend Ozone Concentrations in Houston-Galveston-Brazoria Area During 2012 Summer Episode Using CAMx Paper# 1064 Raghava Rao Kommalapati, Tarkik Shahriar, Akhil Kadiyala, Hongbo Du and Ziaul Huque, Prairie View A&M University 2:50 PM Texas Specific Operating Mode Bin One Based on Field Test Data from PEMS Paper# 1194 Qing Li, Fengxiang Qiao, and Lei Yu, Texas Southern University TECHNICAL SESSIONS A&WMA Environmental Education Resource Guides (EERG) – Train-the-Trainer Workshop Panelists: • Joann L. Held, Air Toxics Analysis Services Track: EDUC Room: Strand 13B • Srinidhi Balasubramanian, Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Thursday, June 23, 2016, 1:30 PM Panel – Education Council Chair: Richard Watson, Education Council Vice Chair: Joann Held, Air Toxics Analysis Services Air Quality Work in Indian Country This session will introduce attendees to the wealth of environmental education materials available from A&WMA, with a focus on the Environmental Education Resource Guides (EERGs). The EERGs offer lessons for almost any situation, from a simple Earth Day classroom visit by an individual to a full workshop for multiple teachers who can then take the materials back to their own classrooms to be used year after year. Each lesson includes background material for teachers, creative classroom activities, and extensions that can be used for independent student projects. This session will also introduce the A&WMA Teacher Workshop Presenter’s Manual and will guide attendees in their preparation and implementation of Teacher Workshops. It will also suggest ways to run a Train-the-Trainer Workshop to prepare local A&WMA members to give Teacher Workshops. A limited number of the Presenter’s Manuals will also be available. The Manual guides the User through every step of the process from planning an event through sample workshop agendas and more. Two sets of lessons are available: one focused on Air Quality and the other focused on Nonpoint Source Water Pollution. The Panel members have been updating the EERGs, and a recently developed lesson on ozone will be introduced at ACE 2016. The sample lessons listed below will be focused on toxics and water pollution which are relevant to Louisiana. SAMPLE LESSONS • Oh-Three and Me: Ozone Sources, Effects & Levels (Grades 6-8) • Unhappy about HAPs: Introduction to Hazardous Air Pollutants in Our Every Day World (Grades 9-12) • Slip Slidin’ Away: Soil Erosion (Grades 9-12) Join members of the National Tribal Air Association (NTAA) and participants to the National Tribal Forum on Air Quality (NTF-AQ) to discuss their work to advance air quality in Indian Country. This panel discussion will include recent advances in air quality policy and practice that Tribes have made. NTAA officials will also provide best practices for environmental professionals to work with Tribes on air quality issues in Indian Country. Advances in Nanoscale Science and Engineering and Regulation of Nanotechnology Track: NANO Room: Strand 13A Thursday, June 23, 2016, 1:30 PM Panel – TCC: NAN2 Chair: Yevgen Nazarenko, McGill University Vice Chair: Thomas Morahan, Greystone Environmental Management Engineered nanomaterials are increasingly used in a vast array of intermediate industrial and end-user consumer products and applications. The attention and R&D efforts in the field of nanotechnology are associated with a wide array of useful physico-chemical electrical optical quantum characteristics and bioactivity that matter dispersed at nanoscale or nanostructured has. At the same time, just like with conventional materials and chemicals, release of nanomaterials into the environment and human exposure to nanomaterials occur at different stages during nanomaterials’ life cycles – from production of raw materials during manufacturing of products, throughout product life and in the process, and after disposal and waste processing. As a result, there is an ever growing demand for better analytical techniques and characterization approaches for both development and production of nanomaterials and for environmental monitoring and human exposure assessment. Analysis and characterization of nanomaterials are challenging due to increasing difficulties of imaging, measuring, counting, and characterizing matter at small scale and in small quantities. The physico-chemical variety and frequent use of complex nanomaterial-containing mixtures and structures complicate things further. The techniques and approaches New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 93 Thursday, June 23 • Name That Source: Types of Water Pollution and Their Sources (Grades 6-8) Thursday, June 23, 2016, 1:30 PM Panel – TCC: IEA1 Chair: Charlie Lippert, Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe Technical Program One good way to get these materials into the hands of educators especially in Grades K-12 classrooms is to host a Teacher Training Workshop. The session presenters will provide an overview of available materials discuss models for structuring a Teacher Workshop and give tips on talking to Teachers. Hands-on experience with a sample of exercises contained in the EERGs will be included to give attendees the confidence to go out and host Teacher Training Workshops through local A&WMA Sections and Chapters. Track: FEDS/REGU Room: Bolden 6 TECHNICAL SESSIONS for nanoobject and nanomaterial analysis and characterization can be used in both the nanotechnology development and manufacturing as well as environmental and health risk assessment research. We also have a very limited understanding of the extent of potential for exposure to nanomaterials and environmental releases, and of the form of nanomaterials and changes they undergo in the process of release and afterwards. All these aspects can potentially result in health impacts, which are critical to know for evidence-based regulation development. Likewise a number of ambiguities and challenges exist in the regulatory domain as it is hard to determine criteria and boundaries and categories used to define and describe nanomaterials and understand which of them need to be regulated and for what reasons.The panelists will discuss the benefits, use and potential safety concerns associated with nanomaterials, and currently available sampling measurement and analytical techniques. Specific instruments for nanoaerosol and nanomaterial analysis will be described. Additional discussion will touch upon measurement and experimental approaches to assessment of inhalation exposure to airborne nanomaterials and to incidental nanoparticles which may be released from industrial and other processes. Lastly, some recent nanotechnology regulatory developments will be summarized. Hot Topics in the Chemical and Refining Industries Panelists: 2:30 PM PM10/2.5 Emissions from Gas-Fired Boilers and Heaters: Improving Test Methods and Emission Factors Paper# 1039 Glenn C. England, Ramboll Environ; Michael S. Astin and Eric Benson, Holly Marketing and Refining - Woods Cross LLC; Kevin Crosby, Montrose Environmental Group, Inc. • Yevgen Nazarenko, Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, McGill University • William Looney, AECOM • Kate Cerully, TSI Incorporated Track: O&GS Room: Strand 11B Thursday, June 23, 2016, 1:30 PM Platform – TCC: CHE10 Chair: Valerie Lege Mayhall, Geosyntec 1:30 PM Air Emissions Data: How to Measure It and What to Do With It Paper# 1226 Thomas Dutton, Greenberg Traurig LLP; Kate Graf, Geosyntec Consultants 1:50 PM 2016 TSCA Chemical Data Reporting Paper# 820 Loree Fields, Jeremy Weese and Mallorie A. Lefante, AECOM 2:10 PM Chemical and Refinery Dock Terminals - Marine Vapor Control Systems and The Countdown to New Regulations and Deadlines for Recertification Paper# 1247 Jeff Simmerman, ERM Oil and Gas Operations in Wetlands & Other Waters of the U.S. Track: O&GS Room: Strand 12B Thursday, June 23, 2016, 1:30 PM Panel – TCC: CHE11 Chair: Michael Waguespack, Waldemar S. Nelson Vice Chair: Richard Leonhard, Project Consulting Services, Inc. This panel will discuss and define waters, wetlands, and federal projects (i.e., Section 10/404/408) subjected to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ jurisdiction for oil and gas activities. The panel will address appropriate conservation banking and compensatory mitigation practices to satisfy regulatory requirements and landowner interests and to exercise practical and effective construction practices. This panel includes the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, consultants, a mitigation bank representative and a landowner. The panel will provide the extent of what is a jurisdictional wetland, how the wetlands may affect the landowner, and what’s necessary to compensate for unavoidable adverse impacts to the jurisdictional site. 94 Final Program TECHNICAL SESSIONS The topics include: subsequent standards under development have been completed for some source categories and proposed for others. This panel will present and discuss the status of MACT standards, ongoing court cases, and residual risk, as well as air toxics regulations of other jurisdictions – local, State, and national. • Section 10 & 404 Jurisdictional Water & Wetlands • Section 408 Permitting • Conservation Banking, Compensatory Mitigation Panelists: • Landowner Insights • Joshua Marteny, Zephyr Environmental Corporation • Engineering & Construction in wetlands. These topics relate directly to project issues and concerns for the oil and gas industry when operating within or adjacent to sensitive features subjected to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ jurisdiction. The presentations will provide timely information on the issues associated with jurisdictional waters, wetlands and 408 federal projects. • Melvin Keener, Coalition for Responsible Waste Incineration (invited) • Wanda Pemberton, EPA OAQPS SPDD (invited) • Drew McClay, Citizens Energy Group (invited) Control of Dust, Odor, and Indoor Air Pollution Panelists: Track: AQCT Room: Strand 11A • Clay Bryant, Project Consulting Services, Inc. Thursday, June 23, 2016, 3:30 PM Platform – TCC: AAC7 Chair: Arijit Pakrasi, CB&I • Andrew Harrison, Harrison Law, LLC 3:30 PM The Removal Efficiency and CADR of Vehicle Air Cleaners Paper# 1155 Chih-Hui Cheng, Chao-Heng Tseng, Chia-Hao Hsiao and Huang-Chin Wang, National Taipei University of Technology • Mike Benge, Delacroix Corporation • Kenneth Nelson, Waldemar S. Nelson & Co., Inc. Air Toxics Regulations Technical Program • Amy Powell, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, New Orleans District (CEMVN-OD-W) 3:50 PM Gas Phase Biological Oxidation of Asphalt Shingle Manufacturing Emissions Paper# 1047 Nathan Hess, Process Combustion Corporation Mini-Symposium Room: Strand 10A/B Thursday, June 23, 2016, 3:30 PM Panel – TCC: REG3 Chair: Paul Siebert, Weston Solutions, Inc. 4:10 PM Atomized Mist for Dust and Odor Control Paper# 1109 Mike Lewis, Dust Control Technology 4:30 PM A Study on the Indoor Air Pollution Control Technology using Semi-Bio Filter System Paper# 1248 Heekwan Lee, Jonghung Park, Rajib Pokhrel and Indira Parajuli, Incheon National University New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 95 Thursday, June 23 The Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 (CAAA) established a technology based approach for National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) under 40 CFR 63. These 40 CFR 63 NESHAP regulations are commonly called MACT standards. The CAAA also defines a major source of HAPs as one emitting at least 10 tons per year (tpy) of any individual HAP or 25 tpy of all HAPs combined. Most of the MACT standards first promulgated addressed only major point sources of HAPs, although some also addressed area sources that do not exceed that threshold. More recently, a number of area source standards have been promulgated. EPA has been under court-ordered schedules for many major point and area source MACT standards. In addition, a number of recent court rulings have vacated or remanded MACT standards, in part or in whole, returning them to EPA for revisions. Finally, the CAAA requires EPA to evaluate the residual risks remaining after the application of MACT standards. If the technology-based MACT standards have not sufficiently reduced health risk, additional standards must be promulgated to reduce the residual risk. These evaluations and TECHNICAL SESSIONS Waste Management Work in Indian Country Track: FEDS/WAST Room: Bolden 6 Thursday, June 23, 2016, 3:30 PM Panel – TCC: IEA2 Chair: Charlie Lippert, Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe Members from various U.S.-wide tribal technical councils and workgroups, and participants to the Tribal Lands and Environment Forum (TLEF), will discuss their work to advance management of solid waste, recycling, and pollution prevention in Indian Country. The panelists will also discuss various issues in waste management commonly faced, or uniquely problematic, or highly problematic in Indian Country. Nanotechnology Science and Engineering Track: NANO Room: Strand 13A Thursday, June 23, 2016, 3:30 PM Platform – TCC: NAN1 Chair: William Looney, AECOM Vice Chair: Thomas Morahan, Greystone Environmental Management 3:30 PM Making Nanotechnology Safe for Primetime Paper# 943 William Looney, AECOM 3:50 PM Preparation of Hybrid Nano Materials with Optical and Electrical Properties for Solar Applications Paper# 914 Christian J. Jarquín, Diana Monserrat L. Romero, Pablo V. García, and María Elena S. Vergara, Universidad Anáhuac México Norte 4:10 PM Catayltic Oxidation of VOC by 13x Zeolite Coated With nZnO in the Presence of UV and Ozone Paper# 1196 Amornpon Changsuphan and Nguyen Thi Kim Oanh, Asian Institute of Technology, Thailand 4:30 PM Potential Inhalation Exposures to Particles from Nanotechnology-enabled Clothing Paper# 1285 Leonardo Calderon, Letao Yang, KiBum Lee and Gediminas Mainelis, Rutgers University 96 Final Program Emissions Impacts and Control Technologies Related to Oil and Gas Exploration and Production Track: O&GS Room: Strand 11B Thursday, June 23, 2016, 3:30 PM Platform – TCC: CHE12 Chair: Brian Boyer, BTGap, LLC 3:30 PM Emissions of Hydrocarbons and Alcohols from Produced Water Surface Impoundments Paper# 845 Seth Lyman, USU Bingham Research Center; Marc Mansfield, and Huy N.Q. Tran, Utah State University 3:50 PM Flaring Enforcement into Next Generation Flare Rule Making Flare Management Plans and Beyond Paper# 897 Linda Bartlett and Brandon Bass, ERM 4:10 PM Experimental Results and Scaling of Emissions of Nitrogen Oxides from Lab-Scale Turbulent Jet Flames Methane, Propane and Natural Gas Flames Paper# 912 A. Melina Jefferson, Darcy J. Corbin, and Matthew Johnson, Carleton University 4:30 PM Monitoring of GHG VOC and Odour Compounds using OP-FTIR in the Oil Sands Region in Alberta - A Case Study Paper# 1243 Lucas Zhang, Long Fu, Quamrul Huda, and Zheng Yang, Alberta Environmental Monitoring, Evaluation and Reporting Agency; Zaher Hashisho, University of Alberta 4:50 PM Computational Cost of Adjoint-Based Pollutant Source Characterization in OpenFOAM Paper# 1084 Carol Brereton, Matthew R. Johnson, and Lucy J. Campbell, Carleton University TECHNICAL SESSIONS Oil & Gas Environmental Litigation Case Studies in Emission/Energy Reduction Strategies Track: O&GS Room: Strand 12B Track: REGU Room: Strand 13B Thursday, June 23, 2016, 3:30 PM Panel – TCC: CHE13 Chair: Michael Waguespack, Waldemar S. Nelson Vice Chair: Stephen Wiegand, Liskow & Lewis Thursday, June 23, 2016, 3:30 PM Platform – TCC: EPE Chair: Heidi Rous, ESA PCR This panel will address environmental oil & gas litigation. The goal will be to provide an overview of several main areas of environmental litigation, including oil & gas “legacy” litigation in Louisiana, which involves lawsuits by landowners related to historic oil and gas operations; several recent lawsuits that allege damage to the Louisiana coast related to oil and gas operations; offshore litigation involving issues such as hydraulic fracturing; and various topics in environmental litigation in Pennsylvania, including regulatory enforcement as well as air and water litigation. The topics include: • Summary of land loss lawsuit brought by the South Louisiana Flood Protection Authority-East • Summary of land loss lawsuits brought by coastal Louisiana parishes • Summary of offshore environmental litigation • Summary of Pennsylvania environmental litigation These topics relate to various aspects of environmental oil & gas litigation. The presentations will provide various perspectives (plaintiff and defendant) on these topics and will attempt to address issues arising in Louisiana as well as other States. Panelists: • Emma Elizabeth Daschbach, Jones, Swanson, Huddell & Garrison, L.L.C. 3:50 PM Variations in the NOx Emissions for Moving Transit Buses with EGR And Non-EGR Engines Paper# 1073 Manideep Yarlagadda, Ashok Kumar, Dong-Shik Kim, and Ruthwik Junuthula, The University of Toledo 4:10 PM The Development Of System Dynamics Model for Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) Flow and the Co-benefits of Pollution Reduction Paper# 1160 Ya Ting Fan, Chao-Heng Tseng, and Wei-Ren Zeng, National Taipei University of Technology, Taiwan Technical Program • Current issues in oil & gas legacy litigation 3:30 PM California High Speed Rail Construction Emissions Offset Program Paper# 1062 Edward Tadross, Alice Lovegrove, and Margaret Cederoth, WSP | Parsons Brinckerhoff; Scott Rothenberg, California High Speed Rail Authority 4:30 PM Air Pollution Reductions Resulting from Energy Efficiency Improvements in Small- and Medium-scale Manufacturing Facilities Paper# 942 Suresh Santanam, SU-Industrial Assessment Center • George Arceneaux, Liskow & Lewis • Anthony Marino, Slattery, Marino & Roberts • Harry Klodowski, Klodowski Law LLC Thursday, June 23 New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 97 TECHNICAL SESSIONS SILs and SMCs in NSR: What Lies Ahead for PM2.5 and Other Pollutants Track: REGU Room: Bolden 5 Thursday, June 23, 2016, 3:30 PM Panel – TCC: REG16 Chair: Gary McCutchen, RTP Environmental Associates, Inc. Vice Chair: Raj Rao, EPA OAQPS/AQPD In the January 2013 decision in Sierra Club v. EPA, the U.S. Court of Appeals for D.C. Circuit granted EPA’s request for vacatur and remand of the PM2.5 Significant Impact Level (SIL) language in the federal Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) rule. According to EPA, that rule language was unintentionally drafted in a way that removes the permitting authority’s discretion to require a cumulative modeling analysis. The Court decision did not address the SILs as codified at 40 CFR 51.165(b)(2) nor did the Court decision address the use of SILs through policy. The same decision vacated the Significant Monitoring Concentrations (SMCs) for PM2.5, pointing to the Clean Air Act (CAA) requirement to provide monitoring. This has resulted in attention shifting to whether existing monitoring data are representative of the area where a proposed new source or modification would impact the ambient air. The panel will discuss these and other issues related to SILs and SMCs and implementation of the PM2.5 New Source Review (NSR) program. Panelists: • Gary McCutchen, RTP Environmental Assoc. Inc. • Raj Rao, EPA OAQPS/AQPD • Bill Wehrum, Hunton & Williams LLP • Bryan Johnston, Louisiana DEQ 98 Final Program PERSONAL SCHEDULE WORKSHEET Use this worksheet to plan each day’s schedule. Time Tuesday June 21 Wednesday June 22 Thursday June 23 7:00 a.m. 7:20 a.m. 7:40 a.m. 8:00 a.m. 8:20 a.m. 8:40 a.m. 9:00 a.m. 9:20 a.m. 9:40 a.m. 10:00 a.m. 10:20 a.m. 10:40 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 11:20 a.m. 11:40 a.m. 12:00 p.m. 12:20 p.m. 12:40 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 1:20 p.m. 1:40 p.m. 2:00 p.m. 2:20 p.m. 2:40 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 3:20 p.m. 3:40 p.m. 4:00 p.m. 4:20 p.m. 4:40 p.m. 5:00 p.m. 5:20 p.m. 5:40 p.m. 6:00 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 8:00 p.m. 8:30 p.m. New Orleans, Louisiana | A&WMA Annual Conference & Exhibition | June 20-23, 2016 99 NOTES 100 Final Program