Title: Stakeholder Interest and Involvement in Technology Verification Programs
1Stakeholder Interest and Involvement in
Technology Verification Programs
- Karen Riggs
- U.S. EPA ETV Program
- Advanced Monitoring Systems Center
- Battelle (Columbus, Ohio USA)
2Stakeholders in U.S. EPAs Environmental
Technology Verification (ETV) Program
- gt500 active stakeholders in 21 groups
- 160 stakeholder meetings conducted
- Many stakeholders involved since
- ETV inception (10 years)
- Additional stakeholders involved as needed
- Battelles Advanced Monitoring Systems (AMS)
Center air and water committees each have 25
members - Also technical panels for individual verifications
Karen Riggs Manager, Environmental Assessment
and Exposure Battelle Columbus, Ohio USA
3Who do the ETV stakeholders represent?
- U.S. EPA Program Offices
- Other U.S. Federal Agencies
- Individual State/Local/Municipal Agencies
- Associations of State/Local/Municipal Agencies
- Individual Industrial Companies
- Industrial Associations
- Insurance and Legal Organizations
- Academic Researchers
- Private Consultants
- Subject Matter Experts (technical panels)
Karen Riggs Manager, Environmental Assessment
and Exposure Battelle Columbus, Ohio USA
4Why are stakeholders interested in being
involved?
- Need better technologies for their applications
- Information valuable in setting
- regulations/accepting technologies
- Supportive of business/economic
- development in
- region/state/industry sector
- Data quality relevant to liability or compliance
issues - Access to new ideas on technologies and
applications - Interactions with other stakeholders
- Maintain knowledge of new technologies
EPAs Voluntary Diesel Reduction Program (VDRP)
is a stakeholder in the ETV Air Pollution Control
Technology Center, and uses ETV results to select
technologies for the VDRP-verified list, to
reduce state- or program-specific testing and
speed the adoption of novel technologies.
Karen Riggs Manager, Environmental Assessment
and Exposure Battelle Columbus, Ohio USA
5How do stakeholders contribute to development of
the verification system?
- Identify areas of technology needs
- Identify emerging technologies
- Prioritize technologies for testing
- Represent, and distribute information to,
- their constituencies
- Identify additional stakeholders and target
audiences for verification information - Can influence vendor or collaborator participation
Karen Riggs Manager, Environmental Assessment
and Exposure Battelle Columbus, Ohio USA
6What do stakeholders contribute to
individual verifications?
- Guide study design
- Review test plan and verification
reports - Provide in-kind support
- Test site, test personnel,
reference analyses - Provide co-funding
- Test collaborators make substantial contributions
- More than 700,000 U.S. and 6,800 hours of
in-kind support to U.S. ETV program over last
three years.
Karen Riggs Manager, Environmental Assessment
and Exposure Battelle Columbus, Ohio USA
7Examples of organizations collaborating on ETV
AMS Center verifications
- U.S. Department of Agriculture
- DuPont Chemical Corporation
- U.S. Coast Guard
- U.S. Army
- U.S. Department of Energy
- Illinois Clean Coal Institute
- City of Columbus, Ohio
- Chlorine Chemistry Council
- Mickey Leland National Urban Air Toxics Research
Center - American Electric Power Company
Karen Riggs Manager, Environmental Assessment
and Exposure Battelle Columbus, Ohio USA
8Collaboration in mercury emission
monitor verification
- Cofunding from Illinois Clean Coal Institute and
four vendors - In-kind support from Northern Indiana
- Public Service Company
- Coal-fired power plant as host test facility
- Facility staff operated mercury technologies
during testing - Laboratory space provided for reference method
preparation and recovery - Access to plant operations and emissions data
- Review of test plan and reports
- Technology prioritization and peer review of test
plan and reports by stakeholders
Karen Riggs Manager, Environmental Assessment
and Exposure Battelle Columbus, Ohio USA
9Collaboration in ballast water exchange screening
technology verification
- Cofunding from U.S. Coast Guard
- No in-kind support from collaborator (other than
vendor)
Karen Riggs Manager, Environmental Assessment
and Exposure Battelle Columbus, Ohio USA
10Collaboration in verification of ammonia and H2S
monitors at animal feeding operations
- Testing of 9 total technologies in 2
verifications - No cofunding other than from vendors
- In-kind support from U.S. Department of
Agriculture - Swine farm and cattle feedlot as test facilities
- USDA staff supported daily test activities
- including operation of reference method
- Materials and calibration gases provided
- Review of test plan and reports
- Hosted Technology Field Day
Karen Riggs Manager, Environmental Assessment
and Exposure Battelle Columbus, Ohio USA
11Collaboration in dioxin emission monitor
verification
- Cofunding from four vendors
- Cofunding from
- Chlorine Chemistry Council
- EPA Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response
- EPA Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards
- EPA Office of Research and Development
- In-kind support from EPA
- Use of controlled combustor as test bed
- Operation of combustor test facility and
oversight - of testing by EPA staff
- Hosted Technology Field Day
Karen Riggs Manager, Environmental Assessment
and Exposure Battelle Columbus, Ohio USA
12Conclusions on Stakeholder Involvement
- Contribute to system by identifying and
prioritizing technology needs,
prioritizing technology
verifications, conveying
information, and influencing collaborators and
vendors - Contribute to individual verifications by
providing in-kind support or cofunding,guiding
test design, serving as peer reviewers
start-to-finish involvement based on
interest/expertise -
- Karen Riggs
- Battelle
- 505 King Avenue
- Columbus, Ohio 43201-2693 USA
- (614) 424-7379 riggsk_at_battelle.org
Karen Riggs Manager, Environmental Assessment
and Exposure Battelle Columbus, Ohio USA