Programme

Conference Programme Sept 23

 

9.00       Registration and tea and coffee 
   

9.30    Welcome from the chair

Mike Quint, Independent Consultant 

 

9.40    Crunch-enomics

Leaving a brownfield site vacant because of the credit crunch can significantly increase both potential liabilities and remedial costs

• What happens?

• Ecological interests and constraints

• Financial implications and remedial costs

Jonathan Atkinson, Environmental Scientist, Environment Agency

Henry E Lang, Environment Director, Waterman Energy Environment & Design

 

10:05    Living at home - too risky? How safe is your garden

Simon conducts a Part 2A style assessment of his own home to examine the conservatisms in the CLEA model

Simon Firth, Firth Associates

 


10.30
    Making the most from your funding application to Defra

   Common pitfalls in applications

   How to make your application cohesive

   How to ensure a more rapid and streamlined evaluation of submissions

Phil Whitaker, National Capital Projects Manager, Environment Agency


10.55
    Q&A 


11.05
    Coffee and tea break

 

11.40  To infinity and beyond
 

   Risk Assessment vs Insurance?

  
Your risk

  
Your clients risk

Mathew Hussey, Associate Director, Tysers 

 

12:05    Update on Health Criteria Values (HCVs)

   Which HCVs differ from before?

   Why are they different?

   The Margin of Exposure concept

Frances Pollitt, Team leader - Health effects of chemicals in land, water and waste, Chemical Hazards and Poisons Division, Health Protection Agency

 

12:30    Human health and unacceptable intake

   How do the new SGV's help?

   Recurring issues - what are they and why won't they go away?

   What options might you have?

Mary Harris, Independent Consultant 


12:55
    Your head on a block - Part 2A decisions

   Key issues to consider when deciding whether a site meets Part 2A requirements for human health

   Decision making process

   How to avoid the common pitfalls

Dr Naomi Earl, Associate Land Quality, Atkins Environment 

 

13:20    Q&A

13:30
Lunch  


Afternoon Chair

Simon Firth, Firth Associates

 

14:20    Data management and spatial statistics

   Data Quality - does it matter

   Paper...Pdf...Hmm that's useful

   Excel... better- but what happens if the data changes

   Database... great but how do I get the data in

   Interpretation- CIEH/ CL:AIRE guidance document just one part of the storey
Rob Ivens, Scientific Officer, Mole Valley District Council 

14:45    Plugging the SGV Vacuum: The New LQM CIEH GAC

   How have the new GAC been derived?

   When and how should the GAC be used- what do they mean?

   Limitations and misues of the GAC

Professor Paul Nathanail, LQM and the University of Nottingham

               

15:10    EIC's General Assessment Criteria- what are the numbers and what are the implications?

   Project inception and aspirations

   Collation of physical-chemical and toxicological data

   Parameter selection and peer review process

   GAC value and Report production

   Uses and limitations

Rob Reuter, Associate Director, Wardell Amstrong LLP 15:35    Coffee and tea break 16:10    Ecological risk assessment

   Why understanding the wildlife on and around a site is important for avoiding potential liabilities in the context of the many existing and forthcoming regulatory regimes affecting brownfield sites

   A case study using the new regulatory guidance on ecological RA will be used to illustrate how potential impacts on ecosystems from land contamination can be assessed and managed

Samantha Deacon, Environ UK

 

16:30    Use of Groundwater Models in Risk Assessment
Case studies will be presented where numerical groundwater flow and contaminant transport model representations are compared with analytical based packages to show how a better understanding of risk and the development of more cost effective remedial solutions was facilitated.

Sean Needham, Principal Hydrogeologist, URS Corporation Ltd

 

16:50 The use of XRF in the investigation of land contamination

   How XRF works

   Case study on allotments

   Comparison with traditional analysis

   Advantages and limitations

   Conclusions

Jonquil Maudin, Acting Manager, Pollution Control Team, Bristol City Council 


17:10
   Q&A

 

17:20   Close

 Please stay and join us for a drink after the conference.