Archive: September 13, 2019

Google快讯 – medical waste

Google
medical waste

实时更新 2019年9月13日
新闻

CHENNAI: Medical waste generated at the Government Hospital for Women and Children in Egmore is piling up in a corner of the …

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The health and environment authorities of Sindh are still clueless about the origin of the hazardous hospital waste, including used syringes, drip sets, …

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Boson signs US medical waste to energy JV … formed a joint venture with Approved Storage & Waste Hauling, which collects and treats medical waste …

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Crystal Market Research Announced the Research Insights added a new analytical data of Global Medical Waste Management Market which focuses …

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The Medical Waste Management Market report intends to provide cutting-edge market intelligence and help decision makers take sound investment …

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Global Medical Waste Disposal & Management Market Growth 2019-2024 serves comprehensive information about the Medical Waste Disposal …

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Participants are asked to not bring paint, electronics, alkaline or lead acid batteries, medical waste, explosives, ammunition, or automotive oil, the …

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The “Medical Waste Management Market by Type (Non-Hazardous Waste and Hazardous Waste) and by Treatment (Incineration, Autoclaving, …

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Gurgaon: The block development and panchayat office of Sohna has issued a directive instructing all hospitals, health centres and clinics to submit …

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“It's not just a trash [or] maintenance issue because it's dangerous, potentially deadly medical waste,” Brooklyn mom Heather Prince told the Brooklyn …

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Earthjustice NOI

EPA Receives New NOI message header and EPA seal
US EPA Receives New NOI

RE: New Notice of Intent to Sue EPA

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has recently received a notice of intent to sue (NOI) that may be of interest to you. The NOI concerns [disclosure of information received under Section 5 of the Toxic Substances Control Act, regarding new chemicals review.. This information is provided for your information only, and this notice does not require you to take any action.

A copy of the NOI can be found here: https://www.epa.gov/ogc/notices-intent-sue-us-environmental-protection-agency-epa

# # #

To view other NOIs, complaints, and filings, please visit: https://www.epa.gov/ogc

You are receiving this notice because this email address is subscribed to this topic. Manage your subscription at https://www.epa.gov/ogc/email-subscriptions-new-litigation-notifications.

Disclaimer: Posting does not mean that the notice was properly filed and/or served upon EPA or the United States, and EPA does not waive any defenses related to improper filing or service as it relates to the notices posted.

 

 

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Google快讯 – waste incinerator

Google
waste incinerator

每天更新 2019年9月12日
新闻

Amsterdam's finance and economic affairs alderman has resigned during a deep-rooted dispute with the other coalition parties about how to solve the …

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A crucial report on Waste Incinerator Market provides comprehensive insights that allow to everyone to understand particular things of Waste …

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… permit request by Altair Disposal Services to construct a landfill that would take waste from an incineration facility near Houston to Colorado County, …

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The first, brought forward by Deputy Mayor Don Cody, will have administration investigate the feasibility of incinerating garbage. The other, initiated by …

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… remove pollutants from marine engine, power plant and waste incinerator exhaust streams to meet increasingly stringent environmental standards.

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Council bosses currently send some waste to be burned at Suffolk County Council's incinerator at Great Blakenham, while some is turned into fuel and …

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"On example in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania the costs associated with an incinerator in 2011 led to it becoming the largest US city to declare bankruptcy.".

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Many have suggested waste incineration as a solution to both the recycling and electricity crises, but the Victorian Greens are calling for a moratorium …

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Cornwall council will put up to £62 million more into its household waste … residual waste collections and weekly recycling and food waste services. … in household non-recyclable waste could mean the incinerator was burning more …

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U.S. EPA orders Guam Shipyard to control stormwater pollution

https://us.vocuspr.com/Publish/518041/vcsPRAsset_518041_112155_fef3ddd8-3a34-461c-8cde-6982e6e31b5f_0.jpg

For Immediate Release: September 12, 2019

Media Contact: Alejandro Diaz, 415-972-3242, [email protected]

U.S. EPA orders Guam Shipyard to control stormwater pollution

PITI, Guam – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has ordered Guam Shipyard to obtain a stormwater discharge permit and to achieve compliance with the Clean Water Act for discharges of pollutants into Apra Harbor, Guam.

“Ship repair facilities must have stormwater pollution controls to protect coastal ecosystems,” said EPA Pacific Southwest Regional Administrator Mike Stoker. “This order will prevent pollution from reaching Apra Harbor.”

Guam Shipyard operates a ship repair facility on Cabras Island in Piti, Guam.  It has operated industrial activities, including boat repair, sandblasting, high pressure washing, painting and material storage since at least January 2016.

EPA inspected the facility on September 2018 and found multiple violations of the Clean Water Act. EPA concluded the facility has been discharging pollutants in stormwater and process wastewater associated with industrial activity without Clean Water Act permit authorization.

Inspectors also observed the facility failed to control blasting grit, paint particles and debris, which discharged directly into Apra Harbor; failed to have adequate secondary containment for oils; did not have spill response equipment available; and had a large accumulation of waste materials throughout the site.

EPA is requiring the facility to:

  • Obtain permit authorization.
  • Develop a Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan to control pollutants.
  • Install adequate controls to contain sandblast and abrasive blast materials.
  • Capture non-stormwater discharges to prevent their entry into Apra Harbor.
  • Ensure spill response equipment available on site.

The Order can be found here.

For more information on industrial stormwater requirements, visit: https://www.epa.gov/npdes/industrial-stormwater-guidance

Learn more about EPA’s Pacific Southwest Region. Connect with us on Facebook and on Twitter.

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Environmental Protection Agency, 75 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA 94105 United States

EPA Awards Nearly $850,000 to Johns Hopkins University to Advance Research on Alternative Methods

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Contact: [email protected]

                                                   September 11, 2019                                                                                    

EPA Awards Nearly $850,000 to Johns Hopkins University to Advance Research on Alternative Methods to Animal Testing

Grant is part of $4.25 million to universities on heels of memo from Administrator Wheeler to prioritize agency efforts to reduce animal testing

BALTIMORE ­ The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has awarded $849,276 to Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, as part of a total of $4.25 million in funding to five universities to research the development and use of alternative test methods and strategies that reduce, refine and/or replace vertebrate animal testing. Furthering these efforts, EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler signed a memo yesterday titled, “Directive to Prioritize Efforts to Reduce Animal Testing.”

“The memo directs the agency to aggressively reduce animal testing, including reducing mammal study requests and funding 30% by 2025 and completely eliminating them by 2035,” said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “We are also awarding $4.25 million to advance the research and development of alternative test methods for evaluating the safety of chemicals that will minimize, and hopefully eliminate, the need for animal testing.”

“Johns Hopkins University has long been an important partner to EPA in conducting research to protect human health, as well as helping tackle global environmental challenges through their research and academic programs,” said EPA Mid-Atlantic Regional Administrator Cosmo Servidio.  “We congratulate the university for being selected to contribute to the field of research on alternatives to animal testing.”

“For nearly 40 years, the Johns Hopkins Center for Alternatives to Animal Testing’s mission has been to promote humane science and human-relevant, modern approaches in the field of toxicology and risk assessment. I’m glad to be part of the Center’s team and working in the field of alternatives for a decade,” said Dr. Lena Smirnova, Johns Hopkins Center for Alternatives to Animal Testing.

Johns Hopkins University will use the grant to develop a test strategy based on a human cell-derived brain model to assess the mechanism by which environmental chemicals might cause developmental neurotoxicity and to screen the chemicals for their developmental neurotoxicity potency.

Administrator Wheeler has called for the agency to aggressively pursue a reduction in animal testing. The memo states, EPA will reduce its requests for, and funding of, mammal studies by 30% by 2025 and eliminate all mammal study requests and funding by 2035. Any mammal studies requested or funded by EPA after 2035 will require administrator approval on a case by case basis. It directs leadership and staff in the Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention and the Office of Research and Development to prioritize ongoing efforts and to direct existing resources toward additional activities that will demonstrate measurable impacts in the reduction of animal testing while ensuring protection of human health and the environment.

In accordance with the memo, EPA will hold an annual conference on new approach methods beginning in 2019.

To read the full memo, visit https://www.epa.gov/environmental-topics/administrator-memo-prioritizing-efforts-reduce-animal-testing-september-20-2019.

Background

EPA has already made significant efforts to reduce, replace and refine the agency’s animal testing requirements. Objective 3.3 of the FY2018 – FY2022 U.S. EPA Strategic Plan outlines a commitment to further reduce the reliance on animal testing within five years under both statutory and strategic directives. For example, the Frank R. Lautenberg Chemical Safety for the 21st Century Act, which amended the Toxic Substances Control Act, requires EPA to reduce reliance on animal testing. Also, Objective 3.3 of the FY2018 – FY2022 U.S. EPA Strategic Plan outlines a commitment to further reduce the reliance on animal testing within five years. Over 200,000 laboratory animals already have been saved in recent years as a result of these collective efforts.

Five university grants were awarded through the agency’s Science to Achieve Results Request for Application Advancing Actionable Alternatives to Vertebrate Animal Testing for Chemical Safety Assessment. The research focuses on advancing the development and use of alternative test methods and strategies to reduce, refine and/or replace vertebrate animal testing. The grantees are advancing the science of non-vertebrate alternative test methods and strategies in chemical hazard assessment.

Grantees also include:

  • Vanderbilt University to test their organ-on-a-chip to study the blood brain barrier and potential brain injury after organophosphate exposure.
  • Vanderbilt University Medical Center to use their Endo Chip technology to research how preexisting diseases affect cellar responses to environmental toxicants with a focus on reproductive disorder in women.
  • Oregon State University to develop in vitro test methods for fish species to screen chemicals in complex environmental mixtures.
  • University of California Riverside to use human cells to develop a cost-effective endpoint to characterize potential skeletal embryotoxicants.

For more information on EPA’s grant recipients, visit: https://cfpub.epa.gov/ncer_abstracts/index.cfm/fuseaction/recipients.display/rfa_id/642/records_per_page/ALL.

 

 

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Environmental Protection Agency, 1650 Arch Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103-2029 United States

EPA SUPPORTING PENNSYLVANIA IN IMPLEMENTING CHESAPEAKE BAY RESTORATION PROJECTS

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For Immediate Release

September 11, 2019

 

EPA SUPPORTING PENNSYLVANIA IN IMPLEMENTING CHESAPEAKE BAY RESTORATION PROJECTS

 

NFWF to Receive $2.4 Million for Local Projects as Part of Funding Reallocation Plan

 

PHILADELPHIA – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is reallocating portions of its Pennsylvania Chesapeake Bay funding from two fiscal years to help apply the funds more quickly and efficiently to the commonwealth’s efforts to restore the bay and local waters.

 

The reallocation of funds was outlined in a September 10, 2019, letter from EPA Regional Administrator Cosmo Servidio to Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PADEP) Secretary Patrick McDonnell.  The letter followed a “productive” meeting between EPA and PADEP in June 2019 to discuss the commonwealth’s high amount of unspent grant funds, known as unliquidated obligations (ULOs).

 

The letter noted that the agencies “jointly made progress in reducing ULOs” by redirecting local government funding to the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF) and reallocating existing, unspent local government funds to ready-to-go projects identified in four pilot county action plans.

 

“EPA’s actions will further Pennsylvania’s efforts to meet its goals for improving local waters and restoring the Chesapeake Bay,” said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler.  “We appreciate the opportunity to assist Pennsylvania in making the best use of federal funds for water quality improvements.”

 

Under the plan to reallocate grants from Pennsylvania’s FY 2018 and FY 2019 Chesapeake Bay Implementation Grant and Chesapeake Bay Regulatory and Accountability Program, EPA is directing $2.4 million to NFWF’s Small Watershed Grants program to assist Pennsylvania local governments in implementing priority restoration projects.

 

EPA also will redirect funds to support stream-side forest buffer projects proposed by the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources and fund critical staff positions, including those at PADEP and Pennsylvania’s Conservation Districts, and up to eight new coordinator positions to implement county action plans under the commonwealth’s Phase III Watershed Implementation Plan.

 

EPA will also entertain applications for Chesapeake Bay funding from the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission for stream restoration projects and from the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture and other Pennsylvania agencies or commissions for projects that improve local water quality and further nutrient and sediment reductions to the bay.

 

The EPA letter is available here.

 

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Environmental Protection Agency, 1650 Arch Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103-2029 United States

Google快讯 – waste incinerator

Google
waste incinerator

每天更新 2019年9月11日
新闻

The incinerators are equipment used for treatment of waste through the combustion of organic substances present in it. In this process, waste materials …

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Additional customer groups include utilities, the construction and food industries and waste incineration plant operators. In addition to cleaning, Reym …

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EcoWaste national coordinator Aileen Lucero said the city's waste … Instead of waste incineration, both the EcoWaste Coalition and IDIS see the need …

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City council has asked staff to prepare two reports: one on the feasibility of incinerating waste, and another on the possibility of buying a machine to …

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In the final instalment, we look at the burgeoning problem of food waste ….. recycle their waste instead of sending it to the incinerator, said Dr Quek.

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SAYS IT WINS GARBAGE INCINERATION CONTRACT WORTH ABOUT 194 MILLION YUAN ($27.26 million) Source text in Chinese: …

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Market Growth by Applications: Power Generation Plants, Oil & Gas, Cement Plants, Chemicals, Pulp & Paper, Metals, Waste Incineration & Others.

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Continuous Emission Monitoring System (CEMS) Market – Major Technology Giants in Buzz Again | Waste Incineration, Petroleum Refining, Steel, …

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Global Land Incineration Plants Market has been an increase in the amount of waste generated due to the increasing population. Proper disposal of …

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EPA Seeks Comment and Commitment on Draft National Water Reuse Action Plan

EPA Seeks Comment and Commitment on Draft National Water Reuse Action Plan

 

Media contacts: Jennah Durant or Joe Hubbard, [email protected] or 214 665-2200

 

DALLAS – (Sept. 10, 2019) Today, at the 34th Annual WateReuse Symposium in San Diego, California, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced the release of a draft National Water Reuse Action Plan that identifies priority actions and the leadership and collaboration that is needed between governmental and non-governmental organizations to implement these actions. Water reuse represents a major opportunity to support our nation’s communities and economy by bolstering safe and reliable water supplies for human consumption, agriculture, business, industry, recreation and healthy ecosystems.

 

“Forty states anticipate experiencing fresh water shortages in certain regions within their borders over the next decade,” said U.S. EPA’s Assistant Administrator for Water David Ross. “Diversifying our nation’s water portfolio must be a nationwide priority, and water reuse has the potential to ensure the viability of our water economy for generations to come.”

 

“EPA has a strong history of partnering with our Region 6 states on water conservation, such as with our memo of understanding with New Mexico on reusing wastewater from oil and gas activities,” said Regional Administrator Ken McQueen. “We look forward to expanding that partnership to help more communities create more certainty in their water supplies.”

 

The draft National Water Reuse Action Plan is the first initiative of this magnitude that is coordinated across the water sector. It was built upon extensive outreach, research and prior engagement with the water sector. The inclusive approach used to develop the draft plan recognizes that meaningful advancement of water reuse is best accomplished by working cooperatively with all water sector stakeholders. The draft plan incorporates federal, state, tribal and local water perspectives and highlights key actions that support consideration and implementation of water reuse. EPA’s goal is to issue a final plan that will include clear commitments and milestones for actions that will further water reuse to bolster the sustainability, security and resilience of the nation’s water resources.

 

The draft plan was announced during a panel discussion with federal partners—the Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Department of Energy, Department of Interior, Department of the Army, Bureau of Reclamation, and the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ). During the panel, the federal partners noted the work of their departments and agencies and highlighted the importance of federal coordination and leadership on water reuse, which supports last year’s Presidential Memorandum on Promoting the Reliable Supply and Delivery of Water in the West.

 

“The Water Reuse Action Plan is a dynamic collaboration of federal partners and stakeholders to innovate and utilize water reuse technology to meet water challenges of today and prepare for the water needs of tomorrow. Developing and deploying these technologies to secure a safe water supply for our nation is a top priority of this administration” said Assistant Secretary for Water and Science at the Department of the Interior Tim Petty.

 

“Ensuring reliable water supplies for the future takes a combination of innovation approaches, from advancing critical infrastructure projects to implementing new conservation strategies. Water reuse is an important component of Reclamation’s all-of-the-above model, and we are committed to continuing our investment in water reuse for local communities throughout the West,” said Brenda Burman, Commissioner of the Bureau of Reclamation.

 

“Water and energy are intrinsically intertwined critical resources for America,” said Department of Energy’s Assistant Secretary for the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Daniel Simmons. “New research and technology innovation, along with increased collaborations identified in the new Water Reuse Action Plan will help advance our nations’ water security and reduce water-related risks for our energy systems.”

 

 “USDA works side-by-side with agricultural producers—with the help of public and private partners—to make land management decisions that benefit natural resources, including conservation and reuse of water,” said Bill Northey, U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Under Secretary for Farm Production and Conservation. “Voluntary conservation on agricultural lands is one of the tools we have to address water challenges.”

 

“The Corps of Engineers looks forward to working with our federal partners and local sponsors to identify water reuse opportunities as we deploy infrastructure solutions,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil Works Ryan Fisher.

 

“The National Water Reuse Action Plan will be a game changer,” said Patricia Sinicropi, Executive Director of the WateReuse Association. “WateReuse commends EPA and Assistant Administrator Ross for bringing together the federal family and moving forward a bold plan for water recycling. Communities across the country are incorporating water reuse into their water management strategies as a proven method for ensuring a safe, reliable, locally controlled water supply–essential for livable communities, healthy environments, robust economies and a high quality of life. We look forward to working with EPA, other federal agencies, and the broader stakeholder community to further develop and strengthen the Action Plan in the months ahead.”

 

“Water scarcity is a real and pressing challenge for many parts of our country, and is something this administration is dedicated to addressing,” said CEQ Chairman Mary Neumayr. “The WRAP is a practical example of federal agencies coming together to address our Nation’s most pressing water challenges and I look forward to working with all the agencies and bureaus represented as we continue to promote coordinated water resource management across the country.”

 

EPA seeks to collaborate with all stakeholder groups on this plan and is soliciting public input through a 90-day public comment period. For more information, including opportunities to engage with EPA on this effort, visit www.epa.gov/waterreuse/water-reuse-action-plan.

 

Background:

Water reuse—sometimes referred to as water recycling—is an innovative and dynamic strategy that can dramatically change the future of water availability in the U.S. Water reuse can be used to meet water demands and mitigate the risks posed by droughts. Recycled water can be used for a wide variety of applications, including agriculture, potable water supplies, groundwater replenishment, industrial processes and environmental restoration. Further developments in water reuse provide more secure, sustainable and safe water supplies across the country.

 

Connect with EPA Region 6:

On Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/eparegion6 

On Twitter: https://twitter.com/EPAregion6

About EPA Region 6: https://www.epa.gov/aboutepa/epa-region-6-south-central  

 

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Environmental Protection Agency, 1201 Elm Street, Suite 500, Dallas, TX 75270 United States

U.S. EPA Seeks Comment and Commitment on Draft National Water Reuse Action Plan

https://us.vocuspr.com/Publish/518041/vcsPRAsset_518041_112137_b26fdd54-c895-426a-b91d-987b78b03d5a_0.jpg
CONTACT:
[email protected]

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 10, 2019

 
U.S. EPA Seeks Comment and Commitment on Draft National Water Reuse Action Plan

  

SAN DIEGO — Today, at the 34th Annual WateReuse Symposium in San Diego, California, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced the release of a draft National Water Reuse Action Plan that identifies priority actions and the leadership and collaboration that is needed between governmental and non-governmental organizations to implement these actions. Water reuse represents a major opportunity to support our nation’s communities and economy by bolstering safe and reliable water supplies for human consumption, agriculture, business, industry, recreation and healthy ecosystems.

“Forty states anticipate experiencing fresh water shortages in certain regions within their borders over the next decade,” said U.S. EPA’s Assistant Administrator for Water David Ross. “Diversifying our nation’s water portfolio must be a nationwide priority, and water reuse has the potential to ensure the viability of our water economy for generations to come.”

The draft National Water Reuse Action Plan is the first initiative of this magnitude that is coordinated across the water sector. It was built upon extensive outreach, research and prior engagement with the water sector. The inclusive approach used to develop the draft plan recognizes that meaningful advancement of water reuse is best accomplished by working cooperatively with all water sector stakeholders. The draft plan incorporates federal, state, tribal and local water perspectives and highlights key actions that support consideration and implementation of water reuse. EPA’s goal is to issue a final plan that will include clear commitments and milestones for actions that will further water reuse to bolster the sustainability, security and resilience of the nation’s water resources.

The draft plan was announced during a panel discussion with federal partners—the Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Department of Energy, Department of Interior, Department of the Army, Bureau of Reclamation, and the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ). During the panel, the federal partners noted the work of their departments and agencies and highlighted the importance of federal coordination and leadership on water reuse, which supports last year’s Presidential Memorandum on Promoting the Reliable Supply and Delivery of Water in the West.

“The Water Reuse Action Plan is a dynamic collaboration of federal partners and stakeholders to innovate and utilize water reuse technology to meet water challenges of today and prepare for the water needs of tomorrow. Developing and deploying these technologies to secure a safe water supply for our nation is a top priority of this administration” said Assistant Secretary for Water and Science at the Department of the Interior Tim Petty.

“Ensuring reliable water supplies for the future takes a combination of innovation approaches, from advancing critical infrastructure projects to implementing new conservation strategies. Water reuse is an important component of Reclamation’s all-of-the-above model, and we are committed to continuing our investment in water reuse for local communities throughout the West,” said Brenda Burman, Commissioner of the Bureau of Reclamation.

“Water and energy are intrinsically intertwined critical resources for America,” said Department of Energy’s Assistant Secretary for the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Daniel Simmons. “New research and technology innovation, along with increased collaborations identified in the new Water Reuse Action Plan will help advance our nations’ water security and reduce water-related risks for our energy systems.”

 “USDA works side-by-side with agricultural producers—with the help of public and private partners—to make land management decisions that benefit natural resources, including conservation and reuse of water,” said Bill Northey, U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Under Secretary for Farm Production and Conservation. “Voluntary conservation on agricultural lands is one of the tools we have to address water challenges.”

“The Corps of Engineers looks forward to working with our federal partners and local sponsors to identify water reuse opportunities as we deploy infrastructure solutions,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil Works Ryan Fisher.

“The National Water Reuse Action Plan will be a game changer,” said Patricia Sinicropi, Executive Director of the WateReuse Association. “WateReuse commends EPA and Assistant Administrator Ross for bringing together the federal family and moving forward a bold plan for water recycling. Communities across the country are incorporating water reuse into their water management strategies as a proven method for ensuring a safe, reliable, locally controlled water supply–essential for livable communities, healthy environments, robust economies and a high quality of life. We look forward to working with EPA, other federal agencies, and the broader stakeholder community to further develop and strengthen the Action Plan in the months ahead.”

“Water scarcity is a real and pressing challenge for many parts of our country, and is something this administration is dedicated to addressing,” said CEQ Chairman Mary Neumayr. “The WRAP is a practical example of federal agencies coming together to address our Nation’s most pressing water challenges and I look forward to working with all the agencies and bureaus represented as we continue to promote coordinated water resource management across the country.”

EPA seeks to collaborate with all stakeholder groups on this plan and is soliciting public input through a 90-day public comment period. For more information, including opportunities to engage with EPA on this effort, visit https://www.epa.gov/waterreuse/water-reuse-action-plan.
 

Background:

Water reuse—sometimes referred to as water recycling—is an innovative and dynamic strategy that can dramatically change the future of water availability in the U.S. Water reuse can be used to meet water demands and mitigate the risks posed by droughts. Recycled water can be used for a wide variety of applications, including agriculture, potable water supplies, groundwater replenishment, industrial processes and environmental restoration. Further developments in water reuse provide more secure, sustainable and safe water supplies across the country.

Learn more about EPA’s Pacific Southwest Region. Connect with us on Facebook and on Twitter.
 

https://us.vocuspr.com/Publish/518041/vcsPRAsset_518041_116951_6ba2e611-e488-4ec0-862f-20d847f9602c_0.jpg
U.S. EPA Assistant Administrator for Water David Ross (bottom row, second from the left) and Administration officials announce the draft National Water Reuse Action Plan at the 34th Annual WateReuse Symposium in San Diego, California.

 

###

 

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Environmental Protection Agency, 75 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA 94105 United States

EPA Awards Nearly $900,000 to University of California Riverside to Advance Research on Alternative

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For Immediate Release: September 10, 2019

Media Contact: Alejandro Diaz, 415-972-3242, [email protected]

EPA Awards Nearly $900,000 to University of California Riverside to Advance Research on Alternative Methods to Animal Testing

Grant is part of $4.25 million to universities on heels of memo from Administrator Wheeler to prioritize Agency efforts to reduce animal testing

Riverside, Calif. – Today, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) awarded $849,811 to University of California Riverside as part of a total of $4.25 million in funding to five universities to research the development and use of alternative test methods and strategies that reduce, refine and/or replace vertebrate animal testing. Furthering these efforts, EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler signed a memo titled, “Directive to Prioritize Efforts to Reduce Animal Testing.”

“Today’s memo directs the agency to aggressively reduce animal testing, including reducing mammal study requests and funding 30% by 2025 and completely eliminating them by 2035,” said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “We are also awarding $4.25 million to advance the research and development of alternative test methods for evaluating the safety of chemicals that will minimize, and hopefully eliminate, the need for animal testing.”

“We are excited to support U.C. Riverside’s work in helping reduce the use of animal testing and improve our understanding of chemical safety,” said Pacific Southwest Regional Administrator Mike Stoker.

University of California Riverside will use the grant to use human cells to develop a cost-effective endpoint to characterize potential skeletal embryotoxicants.

Today, Administrator Wheeler called for the agency to aggressively pursue a reduction in animal testing. The memo states, EPA will reduce its requests for, and funding of, mammal studies by 30% by 2025 and eliminate all mammal study requests and funding by 2035. Any mammal studies requested or funded by EPA after 2035 will require administrator approval on a case by case basis. It directs leadership and staff in the Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention and the Office of Research and Development to prioritize ongoing efforts and to direct existing resources toward additional activities that will demonstrate measurable impacts in the reduction of animal testing while ensuring protection of human health and the environment.

In accordance with the memo, EPA will hold an annual conference on new approach methods beginning in 2019.

To read the full memo, visit https://www.epa.gov/environmental-topics/administrator-memo-prioritizing-efforts-reduce-animal-testing-september-20-2019

Background

EPA has already made significant efforts to reduce, replace, and refine the agency’s animal testing requirements. Objective 3.3 of the FY2018 – FY2022 U.S. EPA Strategic Plan outlines a commitment to further reduce the reliance on animal testing within five years under both statutory and strategic directives. For example, the Frank R. Lautenberg Chemical Safety for the 21st Century Act, which amended the Toxic Substances Control Act, requires EPA to reduce reliance on animal testing. Also, Objective 3.3 of the FY2018 – FY2022 U.S. EPA Strategic Plan outlines a commitment to further reduce the reliance on animal testing within five years. Over 200,000 laboratory animals already have been saved in recent years as a result of these collective efforts.

Five university grants were awarded through the agency’s Science to Achieve Results Request for Application Advancing Actionable Alternatives to Vertebrate Animal Testing for Chemical Safety Assessment. The research focuses on advancing the development and use of alternative test methods and strategies to reduce, refine and/or replace vertebrate animal testing. The grantees are advancing the science of non-vertebrate alternative test methods and strategies in chemical hazard assessment.

Grantees also include:

•       John Hopkins University to develop a human-derived brain model to assess the mechanism by which environmental chemicals might cause developmental neurotoxicity.

•       Vanderbilt University to test their organ-on-a-chip to study the blood brain barrier and potential brain injury after organophosphate exposure.

•       Vanderbilt University Medical Center to use their Endo Chip technology to research how preexisting diseases affect cellar responses to environmental toxicants with a focus on reproductive disorder in women.

•       Oregon State University to develop in vitro test methods for fish species to screen chemicals in complex environmental mixtures.

For more information on EPA’s grant recipients, visit https://cfpub.epa.gov/ncer_abstracts/index.cfm/fuseaction/recipients.display/rfa_id/642/records_per_page/ALL

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