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Partial Contents: Alternative Treatment Technology Information Center (ATIC); Case Study Data System; Cleanup Information Bulletin Board System (CLU-IN); Cost of Remedial Action (CORA) Model; Defense Environmental Electronic Bulletin Board System (DEEBBS); Defense RDT & E Online System (DROLS); Energy Science and Technology Data Base; Environmental Technical Information System (ETIS); Environmental Technologies Remedial Actions Data Exchange (EnviroTRADE); Environmental Technology Information System (TIS); Hazardous Waste Superfiind Collection Data Base (HWSFD); Installation Restoration Data Management Information System; National Technical Information Service (NTIS) Bibliographic Data Base; New Technology from DOE (NTD); Prospective Technology (ProTech) and the Technology Catalogue; Records of Decision System (RODS); ReOpt: Electronic Encyclopedia of Remedial Action Options; Research in Progress (RIP) Data Base; RREL Treatability Data Base; Soil Transport and Fate Data Base; Technology Integration System Support (TISS); Vendor Information System for Innovative Treatment Technologies (VISITT); Waste Management Information System.
Most books on ground water and soil cleanup address only the technologies themselvesâ€"not why new technologies are or are not developed. Innovations in Ground Water and Soil Cleanup takes a holistic approach to the entire field, addressing both the sluggish commercial development of ground water and soil cleanup technologies and the attributes of specific technologies. It warns that, despite cleanup expenditures of nearly $10 billion a year, the technologies remain rudimentary. This engaging book focuses on the failure of regulatory policy to link cleanup with the financial interests of the company responsible for the contamination. The committee explores why the market for remediation technology is uniquely lacking in economic drivers and why demand for innovation has been so much weaker than predicted. The volume explores how to evaluate the performance of cleanup technologies from the points of view of the public, regulators, cleanup entrepreneurs, and other stakeholders. The committee discusses approaches to standardizing performance testing, so that choosing a technology for a given site can be more timely and less contentious. Following up on Alternatives for Ground Water Cleanup (NRC, 1994), this sequel presents the state of the art in the cleanup of various types of ground water and soil contaminants. Strategies for making valid cost comparisons also are reviewed.