&EPA
 United States        Office of Research and
 Environmental Protection  Development
 Agency           Washington, DC 20460
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EPA's  Research

Office Lists

Achievements

For Earth Day 1995,
Assistant Administrator
Reviews ORD's Progress

WASHINGTON, D.C.— Working
determinedly behind the  scenes to
provide the scientific basis for envi-
ronmental protection, EPA's Office
of Research and Development
(ORD) has made some considerable
scientific contributions throughout its
20-year history.
   EPA Assistant Administrator
Robert J. Huggett said in comments
for Earth Day 1995, "I am very proud
of what ORD has accomplished, but
rest assured — the best  is  yet to
come."
   Since its inception, ORD has de-
veloped, refined, disseminated, and
helped others use much of today's
basic environmental science.
    See ACHIEVEMENTS, pg. 2
EPA/600/F-95/008
April 1995


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  Drawing on unique laboratory facilities
and staff expertise, ORD develops, tests,
and verifies new technologies and
scientific methods — providing sound
scientific data for effective environmental
protection.
  In close partnership with scientists from
Other Federal and state agencies, industry,
academia, and the environmental commu-
nity, ORD leads the cutting edge of
enviromental research, shares new
knowledge, and maps the Nation's
continuing environmental science needs.
  When environmental emergencies arise,
ORD responds as a vital team player —
providing technical support to local, state,
and Federal decision-makers and often
performing the  fieldwork and analysis
leading to timely, effective solutions.
  Examples of ORD accomplishments
span the entire  range of environmental
science, engineering, and technical
assistance:

Protecting Human Health
•  ORD conducted and supported key re-
   search defining the effects of lead on
   children and fetal development. Result:
   strong data to help guide the Nation's
   phasedown of lead in gasoline and
   other actions.
•  ORD pioneered research on
   waterborne,  disease-causing parasites
   such as cyrptosporidiitm and giardia, gen-
   erating new data for better identifying
   these organisms, understanding their
   effects, and safeguarding the Nation's
   drinking water.
•  ORD developed test methods widely
   used by government and industry as
   benchmarks  under U.S. toxic sub-
   stances and pesticides laws to evaluate
   chemicals
   for neurotoxicity and other adverse ef-
   fects. The World Health Organization
   and others use these methods as the
   basis for current efforts to harmonize
   testing requirements world-wide.
Key Partner in Emergency
Response
•  ORD dispatched experts to help local
   authorities control outbreaks of
   waterborne diseases in Milwaukee,
   New York, and Peru.
•  ORD led EPA's initial emergency re-
   sponse at the Three Mile Island
   nuclear incident in 1979.
•  ORD helped locate and recover the So-
   viet Union's Cosmos-954 after the
   nuclear reactor-powered satellite
   crashed in the Canadian wilderness.
•  ORD led the on-site assessment of en-
   vironmental damages from the Persian
   Gulf oil fires.

Providing Technical Expertise
•  ORD responded to almost 700 re-
   quests for technical assistance at  more
   than 400 Superfund sites — aiding site
   clean-up managers who need authorita-
   tive information on contaminants and
   effective remediation strategies.
•  ORD is coordinating an interagency
   project to identify and measure pollut-
   ants on the U.S./Mexico Border, laying
   the groundwork for research that will
   help Federal, state, and local agencies
   and health officials address local  resi-
   dents' concerns.
•  ORD helped Poland and Russia to
   adopt state-of-the-science U.S. tech-
   nologies to clean up severe air pollu-
   tion.
•  ORD dispatched technical assistance
   for monitoring and clean-up at the Bi-
   kini Atoll nuclear test site in the
   1970s.

Pioneering Fundamental
Environmental Knowledge
•  ORD's laboratories developed and vali-
   dated more than half of today's meth-
   ods for measuring pollutants.
•  ORD developed the primary models
   used to understand and track the com-
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   plex dynamics of groundwater — criti-
   cal for effective clean-up at Superfund
   hazardous waste sites.
 •  ORD led the development of models
   for tracking the movement and fate of
   pollutants in lakes, rivers, estuaries,
   and oceans. These models provided
   key information for subsequent deci-
   sion-making that banned the offshore
   dumping of sewage sludge. They also
   provide the scientific underpinnings
   for efforts to restore and protect the
   Everglades  and watersheds in the
   South, the  Midwest, and elsewhere.
 •  ORD developed an ecosystem model
   that guided efforts to reduce phosphate
   discharges into the Great Lakes and to
   return Lake Erie to a valuable fishery.
 •  ORD conducted the research on radon
   that has 1) helped EPA and other orga-
   nizations diagnose and/or mitigate ra-
   don in homes, schools, and commercial
   buildings, and 2) stimulated new, cost-
   effective technologies used extensively
   by engineers, architects, homeowners,
   and others.
 •  ORD led environmental monitoring re-
   search by 1) developing, pilot-testing,
   and transferring new designs and
   methods that the U.S. Forest Service
   and more than 30 states are using or
   evaluating for their specific environ-
   mental monitoring objectives, and 2)
   helping develop a Federal interagency
   partnership that saved the government
   $30 million in acquiring, processing,
   and sharing satellite data for environ-
   mental monitoring and other purposes.

Innovating New Technologies
•  ORD revolutionized the harnessing of
   natural bioremediation to clean up oil
   spills and hazardous waste by stimulat-
   ing joint government/industry demon-
   stration projects in Alaska's Prince
   William Sound and elsewhere. ORD  is
   leading similar research using natural
   enzyme reactions from plants to clean
   up hazardous wastes naturally and eco-
   nomically.
 •  ORD identified potential replacements
   for chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) used in
   air conditioners, commercial chillers,
   insulation foam, and other applications
   — helping users find effective substi-
   tutes as CFCs are phased out.
 •  ORD is at the forefront of developing
   and testing innovative methods for
   cleaning and disinfecting drinking wa-
   ter — including the GAC (granular ac-
   tivated carbon) process now used by
   Cincinnati, Ohio, in its municipal wa-
   ter-treatment system, and portable
   "package plant" systems that give small
   communities an effective, economical
   way to provide clean drinking water to
   residents.
 •  ORD developed mobile treatment sys-
   tems for cleaning up hazardous waste
   — saving site managers the time and
   cost of hauling contaminated soil be-
   tween the clean-up site and  an off-site
   treatment facility.

Leadership in Risk Assessment
 •  ORD develops the detailed guidance
   used domestically by government and
   industry, and recognized internation-
   ally, to conduct risk assessments for en-
   vironmental pollutants.
•  ORD conducted a state-of-the-science
   reassessment of the chemical dioxin,
   drawing on the expertise of world-class
   scientists to evaluate trie latest data
   and achieve a scientific consensus on
   this complex issue.
•  ORD issued a definitive risk assess-
   ment of environmental tobacco smoke
   widely used by Federal agencies, states,
   and localities as a basis for setting new
   smoking policies.
•  ORD performed hundreds of compre-
   hensive assessments on the health and
   ecological hazards of pollutants, form-
   ing the scientific basis for many of
   EPA's complex policy decisions.

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For copies of ORD technical publications and further
   information about science at EPA, contact the
  Center for Environmental Research Information
      U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
         26 W. Martin Luther King Drive
             Cincinnati, OH 45268
                (513)569-7562.
              FAX: (513)569-7566

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