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Communicating Smart Meter Value

Sep 9 2010 - 2010-01-01 12:00:00 - Your City

If you are involved in Management or Customer Service and are responsible for communicating the value of smart meters to your utility customers, you don’t want to miss this online discussion - Communicating Smart Meter Value.  more...

Social Media: The new frontier in recruiting, communications and marketing

Sep 13 2010 - 2010-01-01 12:00:00 - Your City

Join social media mavens Matthew Burks and Amanda Shewmake as they provide an insider's perspective on how HR, communications and marketing professionals in energy companies can harness the power of social media to be more effective and productive. more...

Eliminating Obstacles and Delivering the Benefits of the Smart Grid - IBM's Optimized Energy Value Chain (OEVC)

Sep 14 2010 - 2010-01-01 12:00:00 - Your City

The convergence of power and information technologies in the smart grid has created opportunities for finer grained and broader controls of energy flows. These opportunities can improve electric service in multiple dimensions: lower cost, greater reliability, greater customer satisfaction, and more...

Achieving Operational Excellence - What to Consider Before Implementing or Upgrading Your Distribution Management Solutions

Sep 16 2010 - 2010-01-01 12:00:00 - Your City

Significant cost over runs. Changing business requirements. A well thought out plan is essential. Attend this free webcast discussion to hear inside hear three experts in utility operations discuss what utilities need to evaluate when they are considering upgrading or more...

Outsmarting the Smart Grid: IT, Security and Communication Infrastructure  Challenges & Opportunities for Utilities

Sep 21 2010 - 2010-01-01 12:00:00 - Your City

The smart grid is shifting the playing field for utilities. And when the game changes, it pays to be prepared. A nimble solutions partner can help you design the solutions that keep operations on track, even as new challenges come more...

1st CSP Today Concentrated Solar Thermal Power Summit India

Sep 7 2010 - Sep 8 2010 - New Delhi India

Deliver a profitable, productive and commercially successful large scale CSP business in India. Building on the success of past events in USA, Europe & MENA, CSP Today brings to New Delhi the most relevant international experience for the concentrated solar more...

Offshore Wind Energy in North America's Great Lakes Conference

Sep 9 2010 - Sep 10 2010 - Toronto

Two day conference that tackles the most important challenges. A blend of European knowledge from the companies who have been installing offshore wind turbines for the last decade alongside local state governing bodies and leading project developers. Permitting, securing long more...

Autovation 2010

Sep 12 2010 - Sep 15 2010 - Austin, TX - USA

Autovation 2010 is a not-to-miss educational forum that will attract utility executives from around the world looking for new ways to optimize their operations through automation technologies. more...

Global Sustainable Bioenergy North American Convention

Sep 14 2010 - Sep 16 2010 - Minneapolis, MN - USA

The North American convention provides a remarkable opportunity to play a part in guiding renewable energy policy for the 21st century. Attendees will create a resolution that, along with similar resolutions already drafted on four other continents, will help set more...

GridWise Global Forum

Sep 21 2010 - Sep 23 2010 - Washington, DC - USA

Hosted by the GridWise(R) Alliance and the U.S. Department of Energy, the GridWise Global Forum will convene thought leaders from the highest levels of government, business, NGOS, and academia from around the world to discuss the ultimate enabling potential of more...

1. Intro to Nat Gas Trading & Hedging 2. Option Applications in Energy

Sep 20 2010 - Sep 23 2010 - Houston, TX - USA

Introduction to Natural Gas Trading & Hedging - This program provides a comprehensive understanding of the structures that underlie Natural Gas trading. Beyond Essentials: Option Applications in Energy - This course provides a solid practical and conceptual (non-quantitative) understanding of more...

Electric Business Understanding Seminar

Sep 20 2010 - Sep 21 2010 - Houston, TX - USA

Electric Business Understanding provides a comprehensive overview of the electric industry. Position yourself for career advancement by gaining a solid understanding of how the electric business works including key physical, market, and regulatory aspects and how market participants navigate this more...

Electric Market Dynamics Seminar

Sep 22 2010 - Sep 23 2010 - Houston, TX - USA

Electric Market Dynamics offers participants an in-depth understanding of North American electric markets and how they function. Enhance your career by furthering your knowledge of market structures, pricing mechanisms, services offered in markets, and how various participants use the markets more...

Gas and Electric Business Understanding Seminar

Oct 5 2010 - Oct 6 2010 - Los Angeles, CA - USA

Gas and Electric Business Understanding provides a comprehensive overview of the natural gas and electric industries. Position yourself for career success by gaining a solid understanding of how each business works, including key physical, market and regulatory aspects, as well more...

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Solve Cercla and SEC Asbestos Liability
10.13.09   Tony Nocito, Managing Director, ABCOV Conversion Systems, LLC
F. Key Kidder

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    The regulatory whirlpool keeps turning the U.S. power industry every which way but loose.

    At the same time forward-looking industry CEO and CFO are challenged by the uncertainties posed by the rising tide of state and federal environmental regulatory requirements, many utilities are engaged in rear guard actions, fighting the regulatory ghosts of industry practices discontinued decades ago.

    Until the latter part of the 20th century, the marriage of asbestos and the power industry seemed a match made in heaven. Because of its superior insulating properties, asbestos seemed an ideal fit for coal fired, oil fired and nuclear power plants.

    Asbestos containing material (ACM) was used liberally in underground electrical feeds and power plants, to the point where distributors and generators became one of the most ACM-pervasive environments in all of American industry.

    But now, asbestos haunts power distributors and generators who once embraced it. ACM's ubiquitous presence in the utility industry has forced shut-downs and work stoppages, increased costs, regulatory scrutiny, employee asbestos related illness, and thousands of law suits, vexing an industry already bedeviled by the lack of public consensus about what's environmentally acceptable.

    Asbestos may be a utility owner's worst nightmare, but in its heyday, asbestos was a miracle product of American industry. Plentiful and pliable, asbestos provided tensile strength and withstood high heat, and enjoyed nearly 5,000 industrial applications, across the board.

    Boilers, turbines, generators and underground cables were assembled and insulated with ACM. In a typical power plant, asbestos not only lined miles of pipes, boilers and electrical wiring, but also was used as fire-proof roofing and flooring, and installed in walls. Since insulation and gaskets were often fitted to specific areas, asbestos dust and particles were released during repairs and renovations, especially when working with friable ACM.

    Asbestos fell from favor during the 1970s on news it was carcinogenic. Congress soon moved to give ACM abatement efforts the force of law, enacting legislation governing the handling and disposal of ACM which in turn gave birth to the asbestos abatement industry.

    In 1980, Congress passed The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA), and in 1986 revised it as the Superfund Amendment and Reauthorization Act (SARA).

    Under this legislation, owners of sites containing ACM that was removed and shipped to a landfill for storage became a "potentially responsible party" (PRP), subject to "strict, joint and several" liability that potentially result in incalculable future cleanup costs.

    CERCLA and SARA further mandate that liability can be imposed on PRPs regardless of whether such parties were negligent, environmentally compliant, or participated in or benefitted from handling ACM. Additionally, CERCLA calls for treatment of hazardous substances, to reduce volume, mobility and toxicity.

    Even as demand for power continues to rise, the industry is weighted down by asbestos-related factors that are costly and disruptive.

    Despite all the steps generators take to comply with their regulatory burden, the issue of present and retroactive liability lives on to haunt them, providing a living for lawyers.

    Utilities and others who used ACM as insulation are now unable to insure themselves against exposure claims and CERCLA responsibilities.

    The Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) required environmental accounting principles further add to the bottom line concerns of the utility industry.

    In March 2005, a Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) and Financial Accounting Standards (FAS) clarification raised the bar for hazardous and regulated waste generators and others by requiring the industry to account more fully for its environmental liabilities -- i.e., asbestos abatement costs -- associated with the future retirement of fixed assets and asbestos storage in a landfill.

    Rather than waiting until the asset is sold or retired to estimate and recognize the costs of addressing embedded environmental liabilities, FASB financial interpretation No. 47 takes a sooner, not later, approach.

    Under FIN 47, the cost of abatement generally cannot be deferred indefinitely, nor avoided by selling the asset.

    FIN 47 didn't just narrow the range of industry accounting practices -- it has emerged as a diligence issue in financial transactions that can affect closure. Compliance demonstrates the extent to which companies have good environmental-accounting systems in place, and proves a company is proactively dealing with and accounting for embedded environmental liabilities, which spins off good public relations and adds value.

    FASB 143 applies to "legal obligations" associated with retirement of tangible long-lived assets. FAS 5 and Statement of Position (SOP) 96-1 address hazardous contamination, whether in a facility or landfill. All hazardous waste liabilities require CERCLA enforcement and must be reported on the balance sheet of a public company.

    Asbestos is extremely resilient, defies most attempts to destroy it, and takes many decades to degrade naturally. Today, as in years past, the asbestos abatement industry's prevailing modus operandi is to warehouse ACM in landfills. ACM is double bagged in 6 mil plastic, then loaded and enclosed for transport, and finally deposited into a landfill for storage, where it is covered with a six-inch layer of non-asbestos material.

    Further liability problems can occur when bags break and asbestos fibers become airborne or migrate into the water table, or the landfill becomes a Superfund site.

    Consolidated Edison of New York (Con Ed) ran afoul of regulators during the 1980s when company employee's informed authorities that ACM was mishandled on numerous occasions during removal and transport operations. Adding to Con Ed's woes was a steam pipe explosion in Gramercy Park, N.Y. that killed two workers and contaminated apartment units, setting in motion a far-ranging federal investigation that concluded when Con Ed became the first utility to be placed on federal probation.

    It has become increasingly important for the CEO and CFO to insure environmental and financial sustainability to their stockholders, employees, and customers.

    Under CERCLA, for instance, generators responsible for small percentages of site waste may be held liable for the entire costs of site remediation, a burden which frequently falls on the PRP with the deepest pockets, such as utilities.

    The ideal solution is to meet SEC and CERCLA requirements by treating asbestos and other hazardous waste on site, preventing further contamination and stopping future liability.

    On-site treatment eliminates protests and community concerns about the transport of asbestos and hazardous waste through neighborhoods.

    Cost effective on-site technology development for hazardous and regulated wastes treatment must become our way of life. Landfills are already over burdened and expanding them is increasingly difficult. What little land is left must be preserved.

    The sustainability movement is here to stay. Companies that proactively deal with their environmental problems are the winners.

    For information on purchasing reprints of this article, contact Tim Tobeck ttobeck@energycentral.com.
    Copyright 2010 CyberTech, Inc.
     
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