Monday,
March 8, 2021
6:00 - 7:30 pm
Note: ETGS members will receive an email with info for logging into the meeting.
March Presentation
How to Avoid "Kick the Can" - Get More Out of Your Annual Performance
Assessments
By
Paul Favara, Jacobs, Gainesville, FL, USA (presenter)
Dr. Keith Thomsen, NASA, Canoga Park, CA, USA
Dr. Chuck Holbert, Jacobs, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
Kathryn Brown, Jacobs, Redding, CA, USA
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Many remediation projects regularly
assess project performance. Some will consider these assessments
"Optimization Light" activities. To provide more consistency in the
application of the tenets of optimization, different organizations
and industry groups have developed optimization guidance documents.
Most of these documents were developed more than 10 years ago. While
optimization processes have become standardized, many optimization
and project performance evaluation teams overlook several important
questions, such as:
1. | How much additional mass (contaminant or concentration) removal is required to achieve remediation goals? |
2. | What is the timeline for reaching contaminant reduction milestones leading to a transition point and achieving cleanup goals? |
3. | What is the ratio of annual operations and maintenance spending to annual change in the life cycle project forecast? |
This presentation will present an overview of the relevance of these
questions in assessing annual performance evaluations and
optimization projects. As the quality and quantity of information
varies for different sites, it is important to know that all the
questions cannot be answered, and the degree of confidence in the
answers will vary.
Approaches and Activities: Data from published and
un-published sources will be presented to represent typical
approaches used to present project performance. Typical barriers to
addressing the above questions are presented, along with potential
solutions that can better help answer the question and qualify the
confidence related to the question. A project example at a complex
site is evaluated to highlight how uncertainty in contaminant mass
can be addressed. Where existing conceptual site model information
is driving high uncertainty and prevents decision making, a
value-of-information approach is presented to assess the benefit of
collecting additional data. A decision flow chart is presented to
help optimization practitioners navigate the challenge of the above
questions along with a graphical approach that can be used to
communicate confidence in optimization decisions.
Results/Lessons Learned: Typical post-remedy monitoring
projects only monitor how the remedy is progressing but do not mine
existing data or collect additional information that can be used to
improve the remedy. Many project sites don't update time of
remediation estimates presented in the feasibility study or Record
of Decisions. The industry is more focused on assessing
concentration changes rather than mass changes. A qualitative
statement about the adequacy of current performance is used to
project future performance, and lacks quantitation to represent
meaningfulness. Cost and performance information is usually separate
from annual report assessments, so the question number 3 is rarely
asked. While generating mass estimates can be challenging, they can
be represented with uncertainty to allow decision makers the ability
to understand the conditions of which favorable and unfavorable
investments could be made. All of these findings represent
challenges in making optimization decisions. The decision flow chart
and graphical presentation presented will help project decision
makers understand when they are "kicking the can", making progress,
or lack appropriate information for good return-on-investment
decision making.
Biography
Paul Favara, PE, LEED Green Associate. Paul Favara is a Technology Fellow and Client Solution Leader for Site Remediation at JACOBS. He has over 30 years of experience in site characterization, remediation engineering, and implementing site cleanup remedies. Paul's work focuses one development of innovative remediation solutions for complex sites, quantitative decision analysis, and life cycle assessment. He is on the Remediation Journal Editorial Advisory Board and a past president of the Sustainable Remediation Forum (SURF). Paul is a professional engineer in the State of Florida and a LEED Green Associate; he works in Gainesville, FL. He received his BS from Western Michigan University in Business Oriented Chemistry and MS in Environmental Engineering from the Illinois Institute of Technology.
Greetings, and
welcome to the March 8, 2021 ETGS virtual meeting. We hope you, your
family, and your colleagues are staying healthy and well.
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Page updated March 05, 2021 |