SUMMARY OF THE REMEDIATION TECHNOLOGIES DEVELOPMENT FORUM
PERMEABLE REACTIVE BARRIERS ACTION TEAM
STEERING COMMITTEE MEETING

Radisson Hotel Universal Orlando
Orlando, Florida
June 12, 2001

On Tuesday, June 12, 2001, the following members of the Remediation Technologies Development Forum's (RTDF's) Permeable Reactive Barriers (PRB) Action Team Steering Committee met in Florida:

Bob Puls, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
John Vidumsky, DuPont
Robert Gillham, University of Waterloo
Richard Landis, DuPont
Stan Morrison, MacTec-ERS
Tim Sivavec, General Electric
Richard Steimle, EPA
Matthew Turner, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
Stephen White, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

Also present were Volker Birke of the University of Applied Sciences; Grant Hocking of Golder Sierra LLC; Edward Seger of DuPont; Leah Matheson of MSE Technology Applications, Inc.; Peter Kjeldsen of the Technical University of Denmark; Torge Tuennermeier of the Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing; Markus Ebert of University of Kiel; David Smyth of the University of Waterloo; Narendra Dave of the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality; Rick Wilkin of EPA; Carolyn Perroni of Environmental Management Support, Inc.; and Jason Dubow of Eastern Research Group, Inc.

PRB SITE PROFILES

Bob Puls said that information about PRB sites is presented in site profiles that appear on the RTDF Web site. (See www.rtdf.org.) The Web site is very popular, he said, and many of those who visit it do so to view the PRB site profiles. The site has a search feature: users can search site profiles by geology, hydrology, contaminant type, or construction type. Carolyn Perroni said that efforts are underway to improve the site profile database. She noted these upcoming improvements:

Perroni said that information on existing or new sites can be submitted through the RTDF Web site or by sending it to Carolyn.Perroni@emsus.com. All information should be submitted by July 30, 2001. Perroni will send out e-mails to remind people of the due date.

THE PRB ACTION TEAM's ROLE

Puls and John Vidumsky said that the PRB Action Team has been in existence for several years. During that time, great strides have been made toward advancing PRB development, implementation, and acceptance. The Action Team has promoted PRB technologies by sponsoring research, performing technology transfer, and supporting training programs. In addition, Puls said, the Action Team was involved with a long-term performance monitoring study that was performed by EPA, the Department of Defense, and the Department of Energy. The results of this tri-agency study will be released by the end of the year.

Puls and Vidumsky said that the PRB Action Team is at a crossroads: many of its activities have been completed, and the Steering Committee needs to identify the Action Team's path forward. The two co-chairs asked meeting attendees for suggestions on how to proceed. Attendees identified areas of research that could be explored and potential activities to pursue. The following consensus emerged from their conversation: the PRB Action Team should focus on promoting PRB technologies. At the start of the meeting, not all of the attendees agreed with this stance. In fact, some indicated discomfort with taking on the role of "marketer" and suggested keeping the Action Team's activities in the arena of research generation. It was quickly pointed out, however, that technology promotion has always been one of the Action Team's core goals. In fact, the Action Team has already been involved with an extensive training program, the purpose of which was to educate the regulatory community about the benefits of PRB technologies. Despite the fact that many regulators now understand the merits of PRBs, attendees noted, the technology is still underutilized. One attendee suggested that this was because the technology is still in the early stages of the marketing curve. Another attendee said that the technology is still regarded as high risk, and that many site owners fear going forth with PRBs because they are uncertain of the technology's efficacy. Another attendee thought that steep up-front installation costs pose a major obstacle, noting that site managers have been known to pick cheap interim measures over effective long-term remedial solutions. Other attendees suspected that the technology's lack of widespread market penetration indicates that consultants have not completely embraced PRBs. Attendees agreed that consultants play a key role in selecting remediation technologies, and that outreach efforts to this group should be intensified.

Meeting attendees brainstormed on ways to promote PRB technologies. They expressed the most interest in the following activities:

One attendee suggested asking someone with marketing experience to review the RTDF Web site to provide input on its navigability and usefulness. Also, some attendees talked about using a Web-based training to reach out to the consulting community. Few attendees expressed interest, however, in pursuing this latter option.

Throughout the conversation, attendees identified a number of other activities that might be useful to pursue. Although these activities were not chosen as topics for immediate followup, they are listed here for the sake of completeness.