UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
                            WASHINGTON, D.C.  20460


                              July 31,  1985
                                                                     OFFICE Of
                                                                   4E ADMINISTRATOR
Hon. Lee M. Thomas
Administrator
a. S. Environmental Protection Agency
401 M street, s. w.
Washington, D» C.   20460

Dear Mr. Thomas:

The Science Mvisory Board has completed its review, which began 
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                REPORT

           on the review of

THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY'S

    GROUND WATER RESEARCH PROGRAM
                by the
Ground Water Research Review Committee
        Science Advisory Board
U. S. Environmental Protection Agency
               July  1985

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                              EPA NOTICE
This report lias been written as a part of the activities of the Science
Advisory Board, a public advisory group providing extramural scientific
information and advice to the Administrator and other officials of the
Environmental Protection Agency,  the Board Is structured to provide a
balanced expert assessment of scientific natters related to problems
facing the Agency.  This report has not been reviewed for approval by
the Agency, and hence the contents of this report do not necessarily
represent the views and policies of the Environmental Protection Agency,
nor does mention of trade names or commercial products constitute en-
dorsement or recommendation for use*

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                               Table of Contents
  I,  Principal Findings and Recommendations .. ......... .......... ........   1

 II.  Introduction  ....... . » ...... .......,,.........*•*••*•• ........... • - •

          The Hature  of  the Ground Water Problem  ,,...............*»»••-••   6

          EPA's Authorities and  Responsibilities  to Protect Ground Water .   6

                                                                ..........    7
          Current EPA Activities  ....

          Committee Review Procedures
III.  Description/Evaluation of EPA Ground Water Research
        Program . ..... .*..».» ....... .,«.,.,..........*••.. ..... ...........

          Source Control ,..........**»»»»•»*•«•«*•**»*'*•••****"""****"***

          Monitoring .....,.......•«••*»»••**•" ..... ........... ........ » *

                                                                            20
          Transport and Fate *.«..... ..... **.,,.......»».»*«•*••»««»«*-

          Eemedial Act ion /Aquifer Cleanup .,, ....... .....,.....,,......*-•   24


                                                                            28
 IV *  Technology Transfer and Training ..........«••»»••«*»"•-•****•••****

  ?.  Policy Aspects of Ground Water Research .......... ,,............» —

 VI.  Appendices

        A.  List of Committee Members

        B.  EPA Ground Water Research Program Summary

        C.  Summary of federal  Agency Ground Water  Research Prograas

        D.  References

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                                  SECTION I


                    PRINCIPAL FINDINGS  AND RECOMMENDATIONS


     The Science Advisory Board was asked by the Deputy Administrator, Alvin
L. Aim  on July 10,  1984, to review the Agency's ground water research pro-
gram, particularly as It supports the EPA Ground Water Strategy (EPA, 1984).
This review was to cover the transport, fate and effects  of contaminants,
abatement and control technologies, modeling, monitoring  and analytical
methods, and quality assurance.  The Executive Committee  of the Science
Advisory Board (SAB) established a Ground Water Research  Review Committee to
conduct this review, which has now been completed.

     The Environmental Protection Agency has no single authority under  which
It is charged with the protection of ground water quality.   Rather, there are
a number of different legislative authorities (with varying requirements)
under which the Agency operates.  These have all been enacted within the last
ten years, and Include the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA;, the
Comprehensive Environmental Response Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA),
the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA), the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and
Rodenttcide Act (PIFRA), the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) and the
Clean Water Act (CWA).  Much of  this fragmentation is mirrored in the re-
search  program.

     EPA conducts considerable  research  in ground water.  EPA laboratories
with major  responsibilities are  the Environmental Monitoring Systems Lab-
oratory-Las Vegas (EMSL-LV),  the Robert  S. Kerr Environmental Research
Laboratory  (RSKERL)  at Ada, Oklahoma,  and the Hazardous Waste Engineering
Research Laboratory (HWERL)  in Cincinnati.   Resources  in the President s
 1985 budget  dedicated to ground water  research  in these laboratories are as
 follows (see Appendix B):

         Research Area              Total Dollars          Person  Years
         	               (in 1000's)

     Monitoring                       1,763.0                  9.4

     Prediction                       6,307.1                 31.0

     Aquifer Cleanup or
        Restoration                      853.6                  °»'

      Hazardous Waste
        Engineering                   _9,272.0_                46.2
                           Totals     18,195,7                 93.3
      Even though there are substantial resources committed to ground water
 research, there is no clearly identifiable ground water research "program.

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                                     -2-
While the research performed Is generally sound and responsive to the Agency's
current regulatory needs, it Is inadequate to support the Ground Water Stra-
tegy or future regulatory and policy needs*

     The Committee's principal recommendations and the supporting rationale
are highlighted in the following summary.

General

     A.  The Committee recommends that, the...Offleeof Research and Develop-
         ment establish a strong central direction for its ground water re-
         search program with appropriate authority for the program director*

Even though there is a "Ground Water Research Manager" la the Office  of En-
vironmental Processes and Effects Research,  the position is not  officially
established; it has no authority across ORB  lines and deals only with part
of  the ground water-related  research programs.  Centralized program direction
will also  Improve interlaboratory coordination and linkages to other  Federal
agencies.

A major  responsibility of  this manager would be  to develop an Integrated,
comprehensive ground water research plan.  There are presently many research
projects supported  throughout EPA,  primarily associated with hazardous wastes,
which  have a significant  ground water  component.  These projects for  the most
part  are not coordinated.  The EPA Ground  Water  Strategy is aimed specifically
at  the protection  of  ground  water  from any and all  sources of contamination.
To  support the  Strategy,  the ground water  components  of  research programs
directed at meeting regulatory  and enforcement needs  must  be  identified  and
 coordinated within a broader framework.   In recognition of the  rapidly ad-
vancing developments  in ground  water  science and technology  in  the private
 sector and in other agencies,  as well as the rapidly proliferating and In-
 creasingly complex regulatory requirements,,  the  ground water research plan
 should be amended annually or as needed.  The plan should provide for feed-
 back to Headquarters offices, Regions and States each year when the planning
 process is complete,  so that they may have some idea of how their needs are
 being met, and better understand their influence on the process.


      B.  The Committee recommends that CERGLA (Superfund) be amended  to
          authorize research and that a portion of the Superfund budget^
          be made available to support ground water research.

  In light of the enormous expenditures projected for the Superfund program,
  there are substantial benefits to  be gained from having a comprehensive data
  bass to support future remedial action decisions.  In particular, projects
  could be designed  to allow evaluation of the effectiveness of remedial ac
  tlons and monitoring systems.  Superfund, unlike other statutes, does not
  authorize  research.  Research at individual sites should be authorized and
  encouraged.  An amount equal to 1.5 percent of the annual Superfund  expendi-
  tures should be made available for ground water research to support  Superfund
  activities.  Funding for research  throughout the ground water program is
  inadequate.

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                                     -3-
     C,  The Committee recommends that 1PA develop and implement a plan
         to identify Information required for Bound ground waterjollcy
         decisions arising under the statutory programs fog which it is
         responsible, and that it devote substantial resources to iitheii col-
         lection and dissemination of such ^information,

This plan should incorporate an Itemized list of major policy decisions
affecting all aspects of ground water protection which are now pending
before the Agency or which will arise in the foreseeable future.  It
should specify in a comprehensive manner the types of information relevant
to such policy decisions, evaluate the adequacy of available information
in each category, and define the studies necessary to address deficiencies*

     D.  The Committee recommends that IgA Initiate research on contamination
         sources that are not addressed by specific Congressional mandates*

There  is a critical need for research that would allow conclusions  to be
drawn  concerning the relative magnitude and importance of ground water con-
taminants from sources other than hazardous wastes.  While  the potential
ground water impacts of land disposal of wastes defined as hazardous under
RCtA are being studied, other types of wastes may  be very Important contribu
tors to ground water conta*ination.  These include septic tanks, sanitary
landfills, municipal wastewater  treatment  operations, accidental  releases,
chemicals applied to the land such as agricultural chemicals and road salt,
and salt water Intrusion,


     1.  The Committee  recommends that  the Office  of  Research andi  Develop-
         ment establish a  formal and  thorough coordination  system with other
         Federal  agencies  to  take  maximum advantage  of work  being done  by
         others,  to  expand the  level  of  expertise  available  to  the research
          programf  and to  prevent  unnecessary duplication.

 The Committee  finds  that  there Is inadequate research coordination among
 Federal  agencies,  even though researchers  themselves  are often aware of
 their peers' activities.   This situation results in a lack of effective
 utilization of results, confusion and unnecessary duplication.

 The Research Program

      p.   The Committee recommends that HPA accelerate research to deter-
          mine  the applicability of land treatment as  a source control option,

 While the reauthorlzatlon of RCRA may eliminate land  disposal of certain hazard-
 ous wastes, the land will continue to be used for the degradation and immo-
 bilization of  many wastes.  A major effort should be  established to determine
 the land treatabillty of all classes of hazardous and non-hazardous wastes.

      G,  The Committee finds that the funding for research on monitoring is
          inadequate, and should be increased,

 Funding for monitoring research (see Appendix B) is now at about 10 percent
 of the entire ground water research program, and yet monitoring is crucial
 to results in programs such  as RCRA and Superfund.  The monitoring share of
 the research funding should  be increased, but not at the expense of other
 components.

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                                     -4-
     H,  The Ageacy should emphasize,, and expedite the development of ground
      .   gate* sampling and analytical methods which have proper performance
         and" "validation data and proper QA/QC procedures!

The Agency's current sampling and analytical methods for ground water are
often deficient in data on accuracy and precision, proper validation and
adequate QA/QC, including the lack of reliable QA samples and standards,

     I*  The Committee recommends that EPA increase its program of field
         evaluation of prediction techniques.

While the USGS has a modest progra* of field investigations underway, the
EPA has specific needs for field-evaluating processes, models, and assumptions
used by its regulatory programs.  To increase the confidence in the state-of-
the-art in prediction, EPA should accelerate its field evaluation program.
In addition, statistical tools should be developed that provide a means of
assessing the heterogeneity, range and uncertainty in basic data and in
predicted impacts on ground water contamination, particularly where local
data for deterministic model use may be poor or nonexistent.

     j.  The Committee recommends that EPA increase research in the basic
         processes  that govern the transport and fate of contaminants in
         ground water, including the necessary data bases for field appli-
         cation.

Data are needed for the application of prediction  techniques  to  specific
chemicals or combinations  of chemicals within the  hydrogeologlc  environment.
The understanding  of basic processes  in  ground water  transport  remains  as
one of the  top-priority items In any  fate and transport  research program.

     K.  The Committee recommends  that EPA  continue  to  assess  field appli-
         cation of available containment techniques  (i.e. caps,  liners,,
         barriers  and  hydrodynamic  controls)  for containment  of wastes  and
         p_olluted  ground  water.

A wide variety of  containment  techniques such as caps,  liners,  walls and
 hydrodynamlc controls  are being utilized at disposal facilities and Superfund
 sites.  Controlled test data relating to their effectiveness is lacking.  A
 controlled study program should be instituted at RCSA and Superfund sites,
 which will serve as excellent  field laboratories.

      U  The Committee recommends that EPA develop methods for remedial action
          in geologic regions characterized by fractured formations or karst
          topography.

 Monitoring procedures and remedial activities are commonly based on the assump-
 tion that the ground water system or aquifer is made up of homogeneous,
 isotropic materials.  This assumption is frequently Incorrect, rendering
 useless the conventional techniques utilized in monitoring and remediation.

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                                    -5-
     M  fhe Committee recog»ends that HP& initiate  research to identify,
        agitable geologic environments for isolating hazardous wastes by.
        iea'na of injec&olTyells, including methodologiesjEor monitoring
        the integrity of the confining layer.

Ejection  wells  are already receiving a significant  portion of diff loult-to-
treat industrial wastewater effluent.  Therefore,  efforts  to help choose
favorable  geologic environments for injection wells  and to solve problems of
monitoring the  integrity of the geologic containment should be expanded.

Technology Transfer and Training

     H.  The Committee finds  that a greatly expanded ground water  technology
         transfer and training program is a critical Agency need*
This need was expressed by virtually all of the individuals a^ organizations
interview by the Committee,  and appliesWh to the large "-**»• ***
workina on ground water-related issues wi&but adequate experience or
Ing  »d ^o State and local governments: on whom ^A ultimately
proper ground water management.  This includes the transfer of
glnetatid by and within EPA, as well as that generated by other
agencies, the States, consultants, and  other countries/.
he Committee recommends
                                  that EPA establish an ift-house training
 ee recomm
ground water science, for the technical training
^ell as State and local officials?
                                       ,
          staff,' as ^ell as State and local officials

   critical  shortage of trained ground water personnel  exists within SPA and
       governeents!  The problem ie particularly acute  for  E*%^f*
        has  a large pool of underlined professionals  wno  are  fi™*a by
                              to ^e ground water
 s
 Water Strategy is implemented.?
          The r^-itt^ recommends increased technology transfer among EPA
                      ~         of fices^Tstate regulatory
  The Committee recommends an annual coabined preaentation at each
  SficTS laboratory personnel from each ground water research
  ?hfaudiencnL»uld include those involved in such ground water-related
          as Unbound Injection Control (OIC), ***««'£*%£? ^er
  Srground Storage Tanks (LUST) and the indentation of the Ground Water
  ^%«v  State and local personnel should also be encouraged to attend.
          j-
        •tr ^rssi — - -"-  --

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                                     -6-



                                  SECTION II

                                 INTI0DUCTIQN
The Nature of__the Ground Water Problem

     Ground water is relied upon for approximately one-half of the Nation's
drinking water, and supplies a wide variety of Industrial and agricultural
needs.  At the same time, evidence abounds that the contamination of ground
water is being detected with increasing frequency, affecting every state
in the Nation.  Today it is a subject of intense and widespread interest and
debate.  A solid foundation of knowledge about" this problem is lacking;
there is significant historical contrast between interest in ground water
and interest in similar environmental concerns such as surface water protec-
tion (first Federal legislation in 1899) and air quality protection (first
Federal legislation In the early 1940fs)«

     Studies of ground water contamination emphasize the large number and
extreme diversity of contaminant sources. " The benchmark Office of Technology
Assessment report (1984) identifies 33 types of sources covering a broad
range of activities (Vol. I» pp. 43-46).  The same observation stands forth
clearly in the Pye» Patrick and Quarles monograph (1984).  This contamination
has been linked to adverse health, economic, environmental, and social impacts.

     A major component of the ground water protection issue concerns toxic
substances.  Toxic and hazardous compounds are being introduced into the sub-
surface environment with increasing frequency.  The concern with hazardous
chemicals, however, is a relatively new frontier in the area  of environmental
protection.  This is true not only in ground water but in all areas of environ-
mental protection.  It is important, therefore, that any program to address
the ground water problem look at the existing  contamination  (and potential
contamination  due to materials already in the  subsurface) and also at  the
minimization of  future releases to  the subsurface environment.

EPA's Authorities and Responsibilities to Protect Ground Water

      The  Environmental Protection Agency  has  no single authority  under
which it  is charged with the  protection  of ground water quality.  Rather,
 there are a number  of different legislative  authorities  (with varying  re-
quirements) under which  the Agency  operates.   Virtually all  of  these have
 been enacted within the  last  ten years.   They include  the following?

      A,   CB1CLA (Superfund) - This  met  provides for  remedial cleanup actions
          at existing  waste disposal sites no longer  being actively operated.
          A major criterion for cleanup  is the threat of  ground  water contami-
          nation.   This  act is also unique in that It does not authorize re-
          search.

      B.  1CM - This•law provides  for the management of  currently-operating
          (or new)  hazardous waste disposal facilities, and establishes prin-
          cipal ground water protection policies.

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                                     -7-
     C.   SDWA - Under this law,  the UIC and sole-source aquifer programs
         provide for water supply protection,  and the Act  also provides for
         establishment of drinking water standards.

     D,   CWA - This law provides a management  structure for State water
         quality programs, including ground water programs.

     E.   FIFEA - This Act provides the authority to  the Agency to control the
         use of pesticides which may adversely affect ground water.

     F.   TSCA - This law provides broad authority to the Agency to regulate
         new and existing chemicals, including their manufacture and ultimate
         use.

     Even statutes of such enormous importance as RCRA and Superfund, however,
have little in their legislative histories to suggest that ground water pro-
tection was a principal focus, or that there was adequate data available
about ground water on which to base legislative decisions.

     Unlike surface water or air pollution problems, 1PA knows relatively
little about ground water problems.  Given the emphasis implied in the Hst
of laws above, it should be clear that there is a critical need for adequate
research into all aspects of ground water if the Agency is to fulfill its
many responsibilities.

     Despite the enormous expenditures planned under the Superfund program,
the law prohibits use of Superfund monies for research projects (even for
documenting, in a research sense, the  experiences on specific Superfund
cleanups, which could provide a very useful data base for  the future).  It
is not surprising that, within  the federal government, little progress has
been made to date to pull together the fragmented and disparate programs
pertaining to  ground water*  Even within EPA Itself, which holds  the predomi-
nant responsibility, efforts to coordinate the management  of numerous ground
water-related  programs  are just beginning.

Current EPA Activities

     During  the past  few  years  EPA has undertaken a number of major  initia-
tives to strengthen its ground  water  protection  programs,  A Ground Water
Task Force was established to:

     A,  Identify  the  areas of  serious inconsistencies  among programs and
         institutions  at  the  State,  local  and Federal  levels.

     B«  Assess the need  for  greater program coordination within EPA.

     C.  Help strengthen  the  States"  capabilities to protect ground  water
         resources  as they themselves define  the need.

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                                     -8-
The Ground Water Task Force produced a draft report In. 1983 which, after
extensive Internal deliberation, together with extensive comments from the
full range o£ outside interests, became the Agency's Ground Water Protection
Strategy (EPA, 1984).  The Strategy has four major components, which are:

     A,  Short-term buildup of institutions at the State level,

     1.  Assessing the problems that may exist from unaddressed sources of
         contamination, including leaking storage tanks, surface impoundments
         and landfills.

     C.  Issuing guidelines for EPA decisions affecting ground water pro-
         tection and cleanup*

     D.  Strengthening EPA's organization for ground water management at the
         Headquarters and Regional levels, and strengthening EPA*s cooper-
         ation with Federal and State agencies.

Following the recommendations of the Task Force, the Agency established an
Office of Ground Water Protection which, for the first time, delegated to a
single office the responsibility to establish policy and coordinate the wide
range of EPA programs and activities related to ground water.

Because ground water research was a key element of the Strategy, the Deputy
Administrator asked the Science Advisory Board, On July 10, 1984, to review
the Agency's ground water research program.   Included in the review were the
transport, fate and effects of contaminants, abatement and control techno-
logies, modeling, monitoring and analytical methods, and quality assurance.
(The SAB was not asked to review the health effects research related to
ground water.) The Executive Committee of the SAB accepted the charge, and
formed a Ground Water Research Review Committee, chaired by Mr. John Quarles,
former Deputy Administrator of EPA, to complete the review, which commenced
in December 1984.

Committee Review Procedures

     The Committee consisted of fourteen  individuals  (see Committee Roster,
Appendix A) selected by the Administrator based on recommendations from SAB
staff, EPA program offices, and outside experts in the  field.  They were
chosen for their expertise in the ground water field, or their experience in
administering ground water programs at various levels of State and Federal
government.

     The Committee was provided a substantial amount  of documentary material
about  the EPA ground water policy and  regulatory  programs  and the ongoing and
planned ground water  research  in EPA  and  in other Federal  agencies.  The
Committee held six meetings  in Washington,  D.C. from  December 1984  to  July
1985,  At  four of  these meetings it heard presentations from EPA staff,
other  Federal agency staff,  and other  groups having an  interest  in the ground
water  research program.   Included were a  number of presentations by  "users"
of ground water  research,  representing EPA regional offices,  the National
Governor's Association, the  Association of  State  and  Interstate  Water  Pollu-
tion Control Administrators  and the Environmental Defense  Fund.

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                                     -9-
These presentations detailed ground water research programs and perceived
research needs.  In addition to oral presentations, the Committee also
reviewed written summaries of research conducted under the auspices of the
American Petroleum Institute and the Electric Power Research Institute.  The
last two meetings were devoted exclusively to finalizing the Committee's
report*  Minutes of all meetings, which include copies of reference documents
and summarized Information on each presentation, are available in the offices
of the Science Advisory Board*

     The Committee divided itself into four Subgroups to conduct detailed
portions of the review.  These Subgroups were oriented around four major sub-
ject areas; Monitoring, Source Control, Transport and Fate, and Remedial
Action/ Aquifer Cleanup.  Members of these Subgroups attended the RSEERL
ground water program review la Oklahoma City, Oklahoma on Match 24-25, 1985,
and visited WEH, In Cincinnati, Ohio on April 12, 1985*

     The Coaaittee's report was drafted by Committee members and Mr.  Harry
Torno, Executive Secretary to the Committee.  In its final fora it represents
the views of the Committee as a »hole*

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                                     -10-
                               SECTION III

     DESCRIPTION/EVALUATION OF THE EPA GROUND HATER RESEARCH PROGRAM


Source Control

     Source control is defined here as technical and managerial approaches
for insuring that pollutants which may be released to the terrestrial surface
and subsurface are sufficiently attenuated before reaching a critical recep-
tor so there will be no adverse effect to human health and the environment.
The technical and managerial approaches include specifically:

     A*  Reducing or eliminating the problem material (e.g., controlling
         application of certain toxic organic chemicals, minimizing waste
         generation and banning certain untreated wastes from land disposal).

     B.  Treating wastes to remove, transform or Immobilize haaardous consti-
         tuents prior to land disposal (e.g., incineration or physical/
         chemical/biological treatment).

     Cm  Effective containment of impounded or land—filled wastes, (e.g.,
         multiple-liner systems, leachate collection systems and covers).

     D.  Physical removal of sources of ground water contamination, e.g.,
         excavation of contaminated soil.

     E,  In-situ and land treatment processes to increase the degradation,
         Immobilization and other losses of pollutants and decrease the amount
         available for transport to Che subsurface.

     Source control must be a key component of any ground water research  pro-
gram because prevention is more cost-effective and more protective of human
health and the environment  than eleau-up.  Prevention of additional contami-
nation through source control while continuing clean-tip efforts is the only
way net progress can be made to reduce current and future ground water conta-
mination.  Typical sources  requiring control by these strategies ares

     A.  Chemicals applied  to the land for beneficial purposes (e.g., pesti-
         cides, delcers and fertilizers)*

     B.  Accidental releases  (e.g., transportation accidents and leaking
         underground storage tanks)*

     C.  Hazardous Industrial wastes disposed of on  land  (e.g., landfills,
         impoundmentst waste  piles  and Injection wells).

     D.  Domestic wastes  stored or  disposed  of using sanitary landfills,
         land application of wastewater and wastewater  treatment plant
         sludges, and  septic  tank effluents.

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                                     -11-
     Qnly some'of these sources are currently regulated at the Federal level.
Such regulation does not necessarily reflect their relative importance, but
rather reflects a series of legislative responses to perceived critical needs,
At the present time, the major source control research efforts are concerned
only with the control of specified hazardous wastes and are in support of
HCRA.

     New information about source control mast be based on good science and
technology.  Reliable information is needed to define the magnitude and im-
portance of each type of source in order to guide legislation and regulation
and to set research priorities.  Cost-effective approaches to prevent new
releases from each potential source must be developed.  The mandated clean-
up of certain existing sources is proceeding at an enormous cost and is
based on a scanty information base regarding which problems are important
and which clean-up techniques are effective.

Summary of Current Research

     Current IPA research on source control for protection of ground water  is
limited almost entirely to hazardous wastes as potential sources of ground
water contamination.  Sources addressed in research programs carried out by
other Federal Agencies include agricultural chemicals (US0A) and delclng
salts (Federal Highway Administration).

     HWERL specifically addresses source control research.  This research
focuses on clay  liners, flexible membranes, waste modification such as  soli-
dification* and  suitable covers for landfills and units such as ponds and
impoundments  that require closure.  This research emphasizes barriers  to the
movement of pollutants placed in landfills, barriers  to water penetration
(thus reducing potential mobility), and methods  to  render wastes less mobile
when placed in landfills.

     HWERL is also  doing research on  alternatives  to  land  disposal in the
management of hazardous wastes.  The  research encompasses  thermal destruction
(conventional incineration, at-sea  Incineration,  burning  in  cement kilns,
non-flame  systems,  burning in industrial boilers,  supercritical water  oxida-
tion, and  catalyzed wet  air oxidation), and  chemical  and  biological  detoxifi-
cation methods*

     The research  program at RSKEfiL has  a  component that  focuses  on  land
treatment  of  hazardous wastes.   RSKERL has  had  research efforts  related to
land treatment of municipal wastes,  but  those  efforts have ceased.   The goal
of land  treatment  is to  degrade,  immobilize,  or transform contaminants.

     USDA research  activities  are somewhat related to source control.   They
focus  on better use, timing and rate of  application of agricultural  chemicals
 (fertilizers  and pesticides)  to soils and  are related to  more efficient use
of the chemicals and indirectly to source  control*

     The Department of Energy (DOE) has  a  research program related to the
 treatment and disposal of  wastes from energy-producing facilities.   Much of
 this effort  is related to  understanding the basic transformations and trans-
 port and fate of pollutants from these sites.   A comprehensive source control

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                                     -12-
program, as Identified for EPA, does not appear to be included in the DOE
effort.  The Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) has a similar general
research effort.

     The Federal Highway Administration has conducted research on the control
of delclng salt applications as a source of ground water contamination.  The
research efforts Include development of substitute delcing chemicals and non-
chemical deicing systems.

     The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has been the primary agency in the
United States for ground water research as it relates to water supply.
Efforts to monitor and understand the transport and fate of organics and
Inorganics In the subsurface have been increasing.  This work is fundamental
to developing and evaluating source control methods.

Gaps and Deficiencies in the Current Source Control Program

     The Committee reviewed the source control research activities in EPA
and found that the current source control research for protection of ground
water  resources addresses only a limited number of contaminant sources-
There  are strong research programs (not all at EPA) on landfill of Industrial
hazardous waste, use of surface impoundments for treatment or storage  of
hazardous waste, hazardous waste piles, above ground storage tanks for
hazardous wastes, hazardous waste containers, radioactive disposal sites,
materials transport and transfer operations, delclng salt applications, and
urban  runoff.

     The review found that, with respect to the source control research
related to hazardous waste land disposal conducted at HWERL, the EPA research
program is adequate and appropriate both in funding and direction.  This
source control technology program should be continued, including research on
alternative  technologies to land disposal and improved land-disposal techno-
logies.  These technologies should emphasize methods to immobilize organic
wastes.

     The program at RSKERL, while not directed at control of specific  sources
of ground water contamination, Is developing scientific principles affecting
the sorptiou,  chemical and biological transformation and migration of  pollu-
tants  In the subsurface.  This research provides  the scientific basis  for
much of the  research on  technological controls for specific sources of ground
water  contamination.

     The efforts at RSKERL also  include research  on  the  land  treatability  of
certain hazardous wastes.  These efforts are not  extensive and will be able
to  cover only  a small fraction of  the hazardous wastes  that  require evalua-
tion.  Furthermore, these efforts are directed only  toward hazardous wastes.
Wastes not  listed as hazardous but which,  when land-applied,  can and  have
contaminated ground water,  also  are not included  in  the  EPA  land treatability
 research  program.

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                                     -13-
     It is clear that the land disposal of certain, hazardous wastes will be
prohibited by regulations being developed by EPA.  However, there are only
three ultimate disposal sites for wastes the atmosphere, the surface waters,
and the land.  Certainly, the land will continue to be used for the treatment
and disposal of many wastes, Including some listed hazardous wastes.  There-
fore, it is important that the land continue to be considered as a waste man-
agement and disposal alternative and that research be accelerated to determine
the applicability of land treatment as a source control option for many
wastes.

     The Committee also notes that EPA has done very little research empha-
sizing generic approaches to the treatment of wastes to render them less
hazardous.  Also, reducing the generation of hazardous waste, especially
the type that will be land-applied, organic and inorganic sludges and re-
siduals, is an important source control method that will reduce the subse-
quent contamination of ground water.

     Other potential sources of ground water contamination that are not ade-
quately addressed by current research programs include septic tanksp munici-
pal wastewater treatment operations such as sludge disposal, injection wells,
land disposal of non-hazardous wastes, underground storage tanks, salt dome
storage, mining activities, agricultural chemical usage, and multimedia
transfers (e.g., atmospheric pollutants as a source of ground water contamin-
ation and ground water surface water interactions)*  Information on the char-
acter of these sources Is scattered throughout the literature, but conclusions
about the importance of their impact on ground water quality have not been
drawn.

     Because many sources of ground water contamination are not being ad—
dressed by current research programs, one objective of the EPA ground water
research program should be  to develop reliable information about the impor-
tance of each type of source (for which EPA already has regulatory authority),
and to establish research priorities.  Next, cost-effective approaches to
prevent new releases from each potential source need to be developed.  Final-
ly, the scientific and technological information base to support the clean-up
of certain existing sources needs to be expanded to assess which sites are
Important and which clean-up methods are effective.

Re commendatIons

     A*  Sources of ground water contamination.

     The current EPA source control research efforts focus almost entirely
     on hazardous wastes as & result of urgent legislative mandates.  As  a
     result, the Impacts of land applied non-hazardous wastes on ground
     water quality are not  clear and it is difficult to know what  other
     sources should be controlled and what level of research should be

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                               -14-
de-roted to these other ("non-hazardous") waste sources.  Therefore, the
Committee recommends that EPAs

     I,  Determine the magnitude and importance of ground wateg__eontagi-
         nation from "non-hazardous" waste disposal operations, such as
         sanitary landfills, septic tanks, wastewater collection
         systems, wastewater treatment facilities, and wastewater/and
         sludge land treatment operations*

     2.  For any important "non-hazardous" wages sources, specify the
         technical and economic feasibility of source control options.

     3.  In conjunction with PSDAt develop more effective application
         practices that reduce migration of agricultural chemicals to
         the ground water*

B.  Source Control

The current source control research effort related to hazardous
waste land disposal technologies appears adequate except for the mini-
muni effort related to  the use of land treatment as as source control
technology for both hazardous and non-hazardous wastes.  The Committee
recommends chat the current land disposal source control research be
continued and that additional research be instigated.  Specifically,
the Committee reconttends that EPA:

     1.  Continue the  program OR reducing migration  from landfill opera-
         tions, but emphasize new techniques  to_ immobilize  organic
         wastea*

     2.  Continue the  program on alternatives to land disposal for
         controlling sources  of hazardous wastes*  These alternatives^
         include thermal destruction and chemical and biological
         detoxification.

     3.  Accelerate research  to determine the applicability of land
         treatment as  a source control  option for all  classes  for hazard-
         ous and non-hazardous wastes*

C.  Source Minimization

As  noted in  the  previous section,  little  research Is focused on reducing
the quantity of hazardous  wastes  being  generated, a  portion of which
will  be  managed  by  land treatment or  disposal options  and could conta-
minate ground water.   There also  needs  to be additional  emphasis  on
methods  to  contain  spilled materials  and  treat contaminated soils before
contamination  reaches  ground water.   These  are two  source control methods
 that  have  broad  application.   Therefore,  the Committee recomtuends that
EPA:

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                                    -15-
          1,  Continue current research on in-situ treatment of contami-
              nated soils to prevent or reduce' "migration.

          2.  Develop more effective emergency-response techniques to con-
              tain or treat spilled materials before they can reach ground
              water.

          3,  Develop techniques to treat wastes to reduce their hazard and
              increase technology-transfer efforts ott existing methods of
              waste minimization.

Monitoring

     Monitoring is defined to include specific protocols for collecting
samples of ground water in the field and protocols for analyzing the charac-
teristics of those samples in the laboratory.  Ground water monitoring is
conducted to determine water quality or water quantity.  EPA requires ground
water monitoring for determining the quality of the resource in order to
enforce the regulatory programs which it administers.  Because of the impor-
tance and magnitude of EPA's ground water program and its implications for
American society, it is imperative that the data gathering which guides the
program be reliable.  Consequently, it is important that sufficient resources
be committed to assure this reliability.

     Sample collection encompasses all regulatory programs and all phases
of evaluation.  Data collected are used to:

     A.  Determine background and/or existing ground water quality;

     B.  Determine the physical, chemical » or biological processes that
         define a ground water system;

     C.  Calibrate and validate predictive computer models;

     D.  Identify appropriate designs for pollution control technologies;
         and

     E.  Verify the adequacy of  those technologies.

Proper collection and analytical protocols are essential  to the Agency's
ground water protection programs.

     Sampling is defined as procedures for extracting significant  portions
of ground water for chemical analyses and for ground water quality character-
ization,  Sampling is also used  to define the characteristics  of  the geologic
media from which the sample is extracted*  These  samples may be obtained
     either a hole  (well) made in  the media  or by a remote-sensing technique*
      Analysis -is  defined as  a  test  procedure  for qualitatively and quantita-
 tively determining the physical  or  chemical characteristics  of a sample with

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                                     -16-
 known precision and accuracy.   Limits of detection and quantitation,  as  well
 as competent quality assurance/quality control (QA/QC), are a part  of analytical
 methods development*

 Summary of Current Research

      The current research emphasis is difficult to quantify because the  pro-
 grams are fragmented.  While many of the broader topics related to  monitoring
 are being addressed, the more complex questions that accompany the  use of new
 techniques, methodologies and equipment have not been answered.

      Ongoing or planned research at IPA relating to sample collection appears
 to foctis on refining the sensitivity and economy of particular equipment
 for locating unknown sources of pollution and on materials development for
 on-site monitoring.

      The primary sample collection research is located at EMSL-LV,   That
 laboratory produces state-of-the-art techniques and equipment designed to
, facilitate identifying problem locations.  One example of such a technique
 is remote-sensing.

      Analysis conducted in support of ground water systems characterization
 and evaluation is presently the focus of substantial activity both within
 and outside EPA.

      The extent of current EPA research in ground water analytical methods
 development is exemplified below:

          EPA LAB                                   R & P
      EMSL/Las Vegas           -Validity, performance of indicator parameters
                               -Field aspects, monitoring

      EMSL/Cincinnati          -QA/QC For SW-846 (QA Samples) methods
                               -Evaluation, improvement of SW-846 methods

 Gaps and Deficiencies in the Monitoring Research Program

      The Committee finds that the program is underfunded and recommends that
 funding be increased in all aspects of the ground water monitoring program.
 In  addition, the program suffers from management fragmentation, and the
 results of the program do not always meet the standards of good science.

      Specifically, the presently available sample collection and analysis
 methods are deficient in defined precision and accuracy, in proper validation,
 and in adequate QA/QC.

      When such deficient methods are promulgated, problems often become
 greater than if there were no approved methods.  The regulated community
 and the regulators must deal with these problems.

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                                    -17-
     EPA's present research effort to validate SW-846 methods by retrofitting
the performanee/valldation/QA-QC requirements (Including the preparation of
standard analyte solutions) is commendable.  This effort, however, is not
needed for those 129 Appendix VIII compounds which are also Priority Pollu-
tants under the Clean Water Act.  the applicable 3Q4(h) methods have already
been developed complete with performance data, QA/QC and standards.  These
304(h) methods could and should be referenced as equivalent methods in SW-846.
In contrast, there are another 250 Appendix VIII compounds for which there
are generally no proven methods, standards, QA/QC, validation or performance
data.  It is on this latter group that EPA's research efforts should be
focused *

     Sampling protocols are needed which are correct for both the compounds
being tested and the type of geologic media being sampled.  For example,
protocols for extracting water from fractured rock will differ from those
for more homogeneous aquifers, which will also differ from those for rocks
of low permeability.

     The development of monitoring techniques for anisotroplc, nonhomogeneous
media Including karst, zones of fracture, and fine-grained unconsolidated
materials is needed.
     The mathematical correlations between the in-situ physical, chemical
biological characteristics of a ground water system and their variation under
laboratory conditions must not be overlooked.  This Is especially Important
in  the development of models.

     Sampling points must be sufficient  In number  to describe statistically
the media or define the variations of the geologic medium.  The anisotropic
and noohotnogeneous nature of the medium  must be described in order  to  extract
statistically significant samples of ground water.

     Finally, faster and more accurate measuring equipment  for in-sltu moni-
 toring needs  to be developed.  This Is another area where a significant
 increase in  research is  needed by the Agency.

     Even with  ideal analytical  tools, the analysis of  some 375 compounds  in
 ground water Is tedious  and  expensive.   A deficiency  in the program,  therefore
 is  the lack  of  a workable  screening test which could  eliminate or identify
 the presence of clusters of  contaminants.  While EPA  has begun  this process,
 there  is a great deal  of work yet  to  be  done.  A similarly  deficient  area
 Is  the use of Indicator compounds  ( water-mobile  compounds whose  presence
 could  be used as a "trigger" for more detailed groundwater  analysis).
      Alternate concentration limits (ACL) for ECRA Appendix VIII compounds
 (based on unit cancer risks, etc.) are being proposed.  Most of these ACL a
 are far below the working limits of detection for any known analytical
 method.  Here, too, research to define practical, measurable, physically
 significant numbers is necessary.

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                                     -18-
Reeommendations

     A,  Sample Collection
          1.  Establish quality assurance procedures for all sample collec-
              tion techniques, including the development of protocols which
              will maintain sample integrity*

          Quality assurance is a tool which makes a method both reliable and
          consistent.  This is a long-term program need.  As sampling tech-
          niques and ajaterials continue to be refined, the protocols need to
          be refined and revalidated.

          2.  Continue support for the development of monitoring techniques
              for quickly JLocating  and characterizing sources and contamina-
              tion plumes.

          This  is a  critical  research need Nationwide.  The faster and more
          reliably a pollution source can be located, the sooner it can be
          addressed  in the  regulatory framework.  The geometric shape, size,
          biological and chemical composition and transient characteristics
          of a  contaminant  plume are critically needed to define the problem
          and its solution.

          3.  Develop and implement a research plan  designed  to identify  the
              physical and  chemical characteristics  of anistropic, nonhomo-
              geneous media such as fracture zones.

          Most  monitoring  systems are designed with  the assumption that  the
          ground water system or aquifer is made up  of homogeneous isotropic
          materials.   In most areas of  the country,  the assumption ts  not
          correct,  but due  to a lack of Information, that assumption must be
          made.

          4.    Develop mathematical  correlations between  laboratory results
                and  in-situ physical  characteristics  (i.e. effective porosity,
                permeability, tratismissivity)  to  improve the simulation of
                ground water systems.

          With these correlations,  predictive computer models could be much
          more reliable.

           5.    Develop matrices for locating and constructing monitoring
                networks that are statistically significant in relation to
                the system characteristics (i.e., the physical and chemical
                properties of the ground water system).

           This is needed to  increase the reliability of data collected, in-
           crease the efficiency of monitoring networks and decrease the cost
           of network installation.

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                                -19-
     6.   Focus the Agency's ground water monitoring equipment re-
          gearch on instruments for field and In-situ measurements.,

     These instruments should measure physical,  chemical and bio-
     logical characteristics on-site.  Monitoring ECRA and
     Superfund sites requires timely and accurate information
     on the extent of ground water contamination.  These data, if
     continuous or frequent, nay also assist in establishing long-
     tern trends.

B»  Analytical Procedures

     I,   Establish quality assurance procedures> performanceand vali-
          dation data for all analytical methods, existing and new.

     Quality assurance allows both the regulator and the regulated com-
     nunity to produce analytical results in which there is confidence.

     The methods for detecting RCRA Appendix VIII compounds are the
     most critical in terms of immediate needs.  The performance and
     validation data should include determining  the accuracy of each
     method, the precision for each method, the  limits of quantitation
     and detection, the  confidence interval for  those detection linits,
     and appropriate QA/QC for each method.

     2,   Emphasize the  development of methods for ground water quality
          analysis*,

     Responsibility  for  the  entire water quality analysis program should
     be placed where  the greatest expertise in that field Is  available.

     3.   Coordinate methods  development for  water  quality  analyses
          between Agency programs.

     Khen an analytical  method has  been proven and  the  necessary perfor-
     mance  data developed for one  program,,  the work should  not be dupli-
      cated.   Such duplication occurred In listing the priority pollutants
      for  the Clean Water Act, and  then again for RCRA ground water analy-
      ses.  The programs  are different, but  the medium being analyzed Is
      the  same

      4,    Improve or refine screening methods for classes of compounds
           that are chemically similar,

      When a class of compounds can be easily eliminated as contaminants
      of concern, the efficiency of monitoring increases and the cost of
      analysis decreases.

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                                     -20-
          5.    Continue to improve the sen8itivity_of analytical methods
               fog organics.

          Analytical methods  that can accurately measure the low levels
          defined by the Agency's programs must be available.  An example
          of this need is the the ACL13 in RCIA.  There must be reliable
          analytical methods  complete with quality assurance, quality con-
          trol, and performance and validation data in order to determine
          compliance*

Transport and Fate

     Transport refers to the movement of a contaminant (solute) in the ground
water, while fate refers to chemical, physical and biological transformations
that result in changes in the original structure of  the contaminants.  The
processes that govern the transport and fate of pollutants In the subsurface
can be divided into  three major areas!  (1) hydrologic, (2) abiotic, and  (3)
biotic.  Hydrologic  processes include convection and hydrodynanie dispersion;
abiotic processes include sorption/partitioning and  chemical degradation;
and biotic processes include blodegradation and biotic transformation of
pollutants.

     The goal  of  transport and fate prediction is achieved  by using  the  sci-
entific process  to understand physical, chemical, and biological processes
through field  and laboratory observations.  This understanding  is used  to
formulate  theories which are translated into mathematical terms.  The mathe-
matical expressions  require  a solution which is often achieved  with  the  aid
of a  computer.   The  resulting numerical model  is used in an attempt  to  pre-
dict  the  transport  and  fate  of pollutants in the  subsurface.  A final  re-
quirement  for  effective modeling is site-specific  data.  This requirement is
often the  limiting  factor In achieving the goal of  accurate ground water
flow  and quality predictions.

Prediction of  transport and  fate of  pollutants (i.e., understanding  all of
the above  processes) is Important to  every program within  EPA concerned with
ground water contamination.   It  is especially  important to recent legislation
such  as RCRA,  the Superfund  law, UIC  regulations,  and the  CWA.   To license a
 new facility under RCRA, one must be able to  predict accurately the transport
 and fate of potential contaminants.   Such prediction becomes even more criti-
 cal if ACL's are considered.  It is necessary to predict contaminant fate at
 existing sites under Superfund to establish effective remediation and to
 assess natural resource damage.

     Furthermore, some hazardous wastes are also being injected into deep
 wells.  This type of waste disposal is regulated under UIC regulations.  As
 land disposal becomes more restrictive, deep-well injection will become  even
 more important.  Drilling monitoring wells at these depths is an expensive
 undertaking.  Therefore, monitoring is limited, and the need for predictive

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                                     -21-
capabilittes for these sites is important.   The ability to predict accurately
the transport and face of potential contaminants is critical to the success
of nost regulations concerning ground water.

Current Research

     Research In transport and fate prediction Is currently occurring at the
Department of the Interior (USGS), Department of Agriculture, Department of
Defense, Department of Energy, Nuclear Regulatory Commission (SRC). National
Science Foundation, Tennessee ¥alley Authority, and the Environmental Protec-
tion Agency (See Appendix C).  Even though each of these agencies is interested
in different ground water problems* the processes In all contamination problems
are similar, and therefore, there is considerable transfer value.  For example,
the NRC Is researching flow and transport in fractured media.  Although
the emphasis is on radtonuclide transport, an Improved understanding of the
transport processes applies equally well to other solutes.

     Of the above agencies, EPA officially coordinates research projects with
the OSGS, U.S. Mr Force, U.S. Army, DOI, and the National Research Council.
Within EPA, much research on  hydrologic processes is conducted at RSKE1L,
although  some research is performed at other laboratories, particularly the
Environmental Research Laboratory  in Athena, Georgia.

     Additional  fate  and transport research Is  being conducted in  other coun-
 tries, as well as by  private  institutions within the United  States.  Perhaps
 the major private source is the Electric Power  Research  Institute, which has
 a comprehensive  program  in the area  of  transport and fate prediction.

     Focusing on ESKERL, research in the  three  process categories (hydro-
 logic, abiotic,  and biotlc) may be summarized  as follows.  Research  in
 hydrologic  processes  is  directed in  three areas:  (1)  physics of flow through
 porous media, (2)  methodologies for evaluating the degree of spatial and
 temporal heterogeneity (biological,  chemical and physical) in the subsurface,
 and (3) mathematical techniques for predicting the distribution of fluids  and
 chemicals in the subsurface.   Much of the current research in ground water
 focuses on the  theory of hydrodynamic dispersion.  Several field studies  now
 in progress are designed to test this theory,  at least one of which Is funded
 by IPA.

      The abiotic processes of primary concern to RSKIRL are sorption
 and chemical degradation.  Emphasis to date has been on expanding
 our knowledge of the sorption process.  A major effort is being made to
 quantify and develop the theory of phase interactions In complex, but
 realistic, environmental systems.  In terms of chemical or  abiotic
 transformation of pollutants, the current effort is in developing tools and
 procedures for measuring In-situ chemistry In  the subsurface.  There are
 few comprehensive studies  of  chemical transformation  processes currently
 in progress.

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                                    -22-
     The ISKIRL research efforts in the btotie processes category are focused
on developing necessary Information about subsurface biotic processes to
predict the transport, fate, and impact of pollutants in the subsurface and
to develop control and remedial technology for ground water quality.   Much
effort to date has focused on obtaining new techniques and procedures for
characterizing subsurface biota.

Gaps and Deficiencies in Transport and Fate Research Frogram

     More emphasis should be placed on stochastic models than on deterministic
models.  Because there is a great deal of uncertainty associated with the sub-
surface, deterministic results alone are difficult to interpret,- Stochastic
results help to increase the level of confidence for specific model applica-
tions.  In some cases, unfortunately, the atochostic approach may require
more data.  Finally, .because there are so many models available—more than
400 models of  subsurface fluid flow, for instance (van  der Heijde et ai,,
1985)—it is important for  SPA to screen computer models and test them  tor
     Another  research  need  concerns  the processes which govern contaminant
 fate and  transport,  particularly  the abiotic and biotic processes.  Because
 ground  water  movement  can be  extremely slow, transformations with half-lives
 in the  order  of  years  may he  the  most significant attenuating process.  Frag-
 mentary information available on  chemical  transformations  suggests that
 hydrolysis, reduction  and possibly nucleophllic substitution are  potentially
 important processes In ground water. Most chemical  transport and fate  models
 assume  that sorption is instantaneous even though sorption, in reality, is a
 rate-controlled  process.

     Regardless  of the type of wodel chosen,  Increased emphasis  should be
 given  to  field testing and  field  validation of the  models, Data generated  in
 association with remedial action and monitoring of  Superftmd  sites may he
 used to fulfill  model  validation requirements.   These data should be made
 available for use by other investigators.

      Current Information indicates that the deeper  subsurface environment
 contains significant populations of microorganisms.  Additional Information
 about the distribution, density, and nature of these organisms In the subsur-
 face is needed.   At present,  little  is known about biodegradation of organic
 pollutants in the deeper subsurface.  Limited results Indicate that the poten-
 tial exists  for significant  biodegradation of a number of compounds.   It is
 not known whether the  limiting factor for biodegradation  is nutritional,
 themodynamic (energy-limited) or kinetic (rate-limited), nor has the  extent
 of adaptation,  physico-chemical  environment, and cometabolism been «we»ti
 gated.   Very little is known concerning degradation byproducts or whether
 degradation  processes  can  be manipulated.

      There is a major need to educate the users of  predictive tools.   EPA is
 faced  with eKanlning  many  potential sites with a small staff, most of  ^
 have limited hydrogeologic training. For these reasons,  the potential exists
 to use inappropriate  models"  to, evaluate sites.  It  is also important  to  note

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                               -23-
that some aspects of ground water hydrology are imprecise, and will always
be so.  Fraction via modeling is one of o«r best tools for unders tiding
^describing these complex system.  It Is important for policy makers to
utilize models, but at the same time, recognize their limitations.  Jddition-
ally, it is important to realize that the model is only as good as the avail-
able 'data and the experience of the model user.

Recommendat ions

     Ground water research is a long-term effort essential to *any diffenat
EPA regulations.  Recognizing this,  the Co«mittee encourages the development
of projects that bring together the  many disciplines  for  the transport  and
fate prediction effort, and integrates and  interfaces the work of  chemists,
microbiologies, and feydrologists.   The Committee developed a  number  of
recommendations which are  listed below:

     A.   continue  to dev«lot> nrocess-oriented  studies In  the areas of biology
          «nH  j.h—iaErv in  addition to fostering pro-fects  related  to under-
          standing  heterogeneous  and multiphase fluid  f lows  in  both thg_
          saturated and unsaturated regimes.

      This is  particularly important for biotrans formation,  sorption phenomena,
      and chemical reactions.

                  numerical ttodels that Support process  characterization with
                   ot> modeling as am aid to understanding transport and fate
                  es.

      Efforts to quantify chemical,  biological and physical proce sses influ-
      encing the transport and fate  of pollutants in the subsurface should be
      Increased.  Because of the spatial variability of the surface  and
      the uncertainty of underground regimes, a stochastic model would  esta-
      blish more confidence In model validity.

      C.  integrate model use and  development  projects with both field  and
          laboratory activities^

      EPA project  descriptions and work  scopes should include  instructions
      to this  effect to produce relevant research products,

      D. Make data ba_ses  from field research  projects  available  in a timely
          fashion  to other groups.

       In all  cases we  recommend  that all project conclusions be supported
       by publicly available published data.  Surprisingly,  many publicly funded
       research efforts have conclusions based upon data not available for
       peer  review.
B.

    of solutes.

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                                     -24-
     E.  Establish a set of standards for code testing and documentation to
         be followed for all codes developed by EPA.

     Adequate user manuals should be generated and mass balance routines
     should be made part of all codes.

Remedial Action/Aquifer Cleanup

     Remedial Action encompasses those activities described In Chapter 8 of
a recent Office of Technology Assessment report (OTA, 1984) which groups
fifteen corrective action  technologies into four major categories: contain-
ment, withdrawal, treatment and in-situ rehabilitation.  Two of these major
categories, withdrawal and treatment, have been combined in this report.

     Containment  technologies are physical or geohydrologic measures designed
to  contain contaminants at their source In order  to prevent or minimize  fur-
ther migration.   Containment methods  Include the  emplacment of cover mater-
ials,  liners  or vertical barriers as  well as the  addition  of chemicals to
stabilize  or  solidify wastes.  Containment technologies are frequently com-
bined  with withdrawal and  treatment  of contaminated ground water or in-situ
rehabilitation of the aquifer.

     Withdrawal and  treatment deal with aquifer restoration where water  is
withdrawn  from the aquifer and is  treated prior to  recharge, use, or discharge
 to  surface drainage.  Aquifer  restoration of  this type  depends  upon the  pro-
per location  of pumping wells or  gravity collection systems.  After water
 collection,  the problem  becomes one  of  treatment  of ground water with gener-
 ally low concentration contamination. The technology for  water renovation
 falls  outside the field  of ground water  research  except in those  situations
where  special attention  must be given to prevent  clogging  from particulate
 matter or biological growth.

      In-situ aquifer rehabilitation involves  in-sltu treatment of  contaminated
 soils  buried wastes, and contaminated ground water.   Methods  range  from
 physical modification of  soils to stimulation of  naturally-occurring  bacteria
 that blodegrade organic chemicals.

 Summary of Current Research

      EPA's containment research is managed primarily by the HWERL in Cin-
 cinnati (and Its sister laboratory in Edison, NJ).  Most  of the projects
 are designed to meet the  urgent, short-term and practical needs of RCRA and
 CERCLA at headquarters, in the Regions and the States.  The containment
 research  at HWERL is almostly exclusively extramural, and deals with the
 properties of materials,  as well as  the interactions between cover, liner or
' barrier materials and the wastes, waste degradation products or leachate  to
 be contained.  Investigations of waste stabilization are  also In progress.
 EPA is currently sponsoring research on the effectiveness of various soil
 materials and alternatives  (such as  flexible membranes, fly ash or paper-mill

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                                     -25-
sludges) to.contain contaminants under different conditions.  The effect of
subsidence oa cover Integrity is being tested.  Vegetative covets are being
evaluated.  Much of the originality and creativity in adapting established
ground water containment technologies (or in combining them), appears to
originate in the private sector.

     Current research on liners focuses on their effectiveness to contain or
minimize the migration of pollutants Into ground water, particularly the or-
ganic solvents.  Laboratory and field research projects are underway to as-
sess the effects of inorganic sales and organic solvents on clay soils (liners).
Field studies of sites where clay liners have failed are in progress to
determine causes of failure.  EPA is also conducting active research to
evaluate the effectiveness of synthetic membranes or flexible atembrane
liners  (FML's) as alternatives  to soil-based materials.

     EPA has recently sponsored extensive research on  barriers such as slurry-
walls,  grout curtains and sheet piling cutoff walls, some in combination with
flexible membranes.  This research has focused on the  reactivity of these
materials with the wastes to be contained, particularly organics.  EPA is no»
sponsoring full-scale evaluations of containment technologies at three sites,
two  of  which are Superfund sites.

      EPA has  sponsored  little  work on hydrodynamie  barriers.  Efforts  to
date have concentrated on pumping in connection with treatment.  EPA  research
program managers plan  future research directed toward  reducing operating and
maintenance costs  for  hydrodynamic barrier systems.

      The EPA  research program on  remedial action  is fragmented  and  the
Investigators  and  contractors  at the  laboratories  appear  to have little
contact with each  other. Thla isolation retards  the translation of  new
knowledge gained from  basic  research on  processes,  fate and transport into
 engineering applications.

      Current  research on withdrawal and treatment at HWESL deals with tech-
 nology  which  includes  the use  of activated carbon, air stripping,  and the
 application of ozone for the removal of  organic chemicals.   Research on
 technology  for recharging water after it has been withdrawn has been going
 on for many years, and has dealt primarily with well clogging due to silts
 or participate matter or from biological growths within the screened area of
 the aquifer.   This work has traditionally been carried out by the USGS and
 the USDA,  The technology for  locating withdrawal wells and determining the
 proper pumping rate and the design and construction of gravity collection
 systems has also been advanced and research is ongoing.  Little effort has
 been made in the utilization of withdrawn and treated recharge water to
 flush contaminants through the unsaturated zone.

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                                     -26-
     Current in-situ aquifer rehabilitation research on the part of both EPA
and the private sector involves treatment by physical modification of soils
and biological methods.  Enrichment of indigenous biodegrading mieroflora
and inoculation with biotransforming microflora are being tested.

Research Needs

     The current research program on containment technology is  mature.
It deals with adaptation, refinement, selection and performance; with
testing new permutations and combinations of materials atid methods; and with
long-tern performance evaluation and documentation.  Continued emphasis
should be placed on the shift  in emphasis -from laboratory or bench-scale
experiments to field validation, application assessment and long-term perfor-
mance monitoring of covers, liners and barriers.  These research projects
should be long-term to provide continuity and consistency in data  collection.
Superfutid sites should be used, whenever possible,  for research  on long-range
effectiveness of containment and remedial actions.  Seal data on which  to
base  costly decisions on closing landfills  and stabilized surface  impoundments
is  lacking.  With  the closing  of many.of these facilities now underway,
there is an ideal  opportunity  to collect this critical information.

      The regular and  systematic integration of new  research results or  field
validation  and  performance  data into the data base  is necessary for maximum
utility of  user-friendly computer  programs  being developed  to  assist permit
writers and remedial  action plan  reviewers. Extensive training is needed
for appropriate use of these computer programs.

      In light of  the success achieved in this  type  of containment technology*
however,  it should be recognized  that it has now reached a nature state and
will require lower relative funding levels in the future.   This contrasts
with increasing financial  needs  for monitoring,  prediction, and aquifer
 restoration if we are to Increase effectiveness and economic efficiency of
 these management techniques in the future.

      Except for high-level radioactive waste disposal, there seems to be
 little or no work under way,  basic or applied, addressing the problems asso-
 ciated with contamination, fate, transport or containment and rehabilitation
 of ground water in fractured  formations and/or karst regions.  The acute
 need for research in this area was  expressed by several users.

      Deep well injection could play an important role in the safe disposal
 of contaminated liquids and high  fluid sludges being  removed from closed
 RCM facilities and Superfund sites. Because of the heavy use  of  Inject ion
 wells and concern regarding their long-term safety,  research  is needed for
 improving monitoring and construction technology.

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                                     -27-
Recoramendations

     A,  Continue to test, assess and improve the application of available
         'containment technologies (e.g., caps, liners, barriers and hydro-
         dynamic^ control) for containment of wastes and polluted ground water.

     EPA*8 present program of examining the efficiency and durability of caps,
     liners and underground walls should be expanded to provide realistic
     data on susceptibility of materials to typical chemical contaminants.
     farious techniques currently being used for installing containment
     barriers should be tested in detail for their long-term efficiency.  A
     major step up in analyzing the economic effectiveness of hydrodynaaic
     control systems Is dictated*

     B.  Expand the use of RCM facilities and Superfund sites as field
         laboratories for the verification of predictive models, performance
         evaluation of new (of adapted) containment methods, documentation
         of installation and maintenance costs, and assessment of aquifer
         rehabilitation*

     Containment walls of various types are presently  being planned at  a
     large number of RCRA or Superfund  sites5 this is  an excellent opportunity
     co  collect first-hand field information  on the usefulness of  these
     techniques.

     C.  Place major research emphasis  on  in-situ  chemical and biological
         contaminant reduction as a restoration or clean-up technique.

     IPA should continue  research on the role that indigenous  or introduced
     soil microorganisms play in reducing  the concentration of chemical
     contaminants,   IPA should also strengthen its investigations  into
     the stimulation and acceleration of abiotic  processes as  a  means of
     in-situ  aquifer rehabilitation.

     D.  Develop  remedial methods  for contaminated ground water for use in
         geologic regions  characterized by fractured  formations  or karat
          topography*

     E.   Initiate research on construction of underground injection wells
          and identification of  suitable yeolofric environments for isolating
          hazardous wastes.

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                                     -28-
                                  SECTION IV
                       TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER AND TRAINING
Introduction

     With the passage of RCRA and CERCLA and the corresponding increased
regulatory control over ground water resources on the State and local level,
the need for trained and well informed ground water professionals has risen
dramatically over the past decade.  Investigations of ground water conditions
at sites of known or suspected ground water contamination can be complex and
require a wide range of scientific disciplines.  The design of such investi-
gations and the interpretation of data obtained call for specialized training*
Where new sites are proposed for land disposal of wastes or where RCRA/Super-
fund facilities are to be closed or remediated, public agency personnel
must be equipped with enough knowledge of the ground water field to enable
them to make proper decisions.

     Regulatory agencies on all levels of government have been forced to meet
the growing need for ground water professionals by using existing staff with
little, if any, formal training or experience in ground water technology.
The need to train such personnel and  to provide up-to-date technology to
them is Immediate and critical.   In the absence of such training and informa-
tion, uninformed decisions are being  made which could have significant
adverse impact on public health and the environment.

     This critical need was echoed by virtually all  of the individuals and
organizations interviewed by  the  Committee  (and in many of  the references
reviewed by the Committee as  well).   This is a major concern, because the
Agency  Ground Water  Strategy  assumes  that the States bear  the brunt  of  tech-
nical activity,

     EPA has  some  strong  technology  transfer  components it  currently supports.
The International  Ground Water Modeling Center  at the Holcomb Research  Insti-
 tute in Indianapolis,  Indiana is  funded in  part  by EPA  and  provides  exten-
 sive training and  support  of  ground water models, information  on model  selec-
 tion and  application,  and software distribution.  The National Water Well
 Association (SWWA),  under the sponsorship of  EPA, operates  a National Ground
 Water Information Center which provides information and training to  thousands
 of ground water professionals each year,  including  some short courses for
 EPA personnel.   RSKERt has a program of disseminating  research results,
 through the existing mechanism at the Center for Environmental Research
 Information (CERI) at Cincinnati, Ohio through workshops,  seminars,  and
 various manuals related to ground water monitoring and  protection.

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                                     -29-
Technology Transfer, and Training Needs

     The most critical need la for an Agency commitment to provide the In-
creased technical support, recognizing that existing efforts are inadequate.
In this regard, the Agency must first look to Its own house, and increase
the numbers of its staff trained in ground water hydrology and pollutant
transport and fate.  This does not mean only hiring new staff, but also
making a concerted effort to provide current staff with the training they
need to do their job properly.  Career development training such as this
typically takes a back seat to day-to-day operational needs; this is a short-
sighted policy.

     Another urgent need is for much wider dissemination and accessibility
of available technology and results of research projects to ground water
professionals and managers throughout the Nation.  Many of IPA's research pro-
jects, for Instance, though published at the National Technical Information
Service  (MIS), a slow, poor-quality source, are never entered in one of
the standard library reference systems.  Therefore, they are not accessed by
broad-based computer searches and,  in effect, are  lost to many potential users.
We recognize that OBJ) has  greatly  increased the emphasis on publishing  re-
search  results  in  the peer-reviewed literature, and that their project  sum-
maries are well done, but  the audience remains  limited.  This accessibility
and dissemination  applies  not only to  In-house  projects, hut  also  to  those
done  by  EPA program offices  (which can have significant  impact), consultants
and other outside  organizations.

      Another  critical  need Is for improved interlaboratory coordination with-
 in EPA.   As  the ground  water programs  in EPA  are  fragmented,  so  is the  re-
 search that  supports these programs.  There aust  be frequent  and extensive
 interchanges  of information,  both formal and  informal,  to  remedy this situation.

 Recommendations


      A.  EPA must Increase by an order of magnitude its emphasis on and
          support for technology transfer and training.

      The number of trained ground water specialists has not kept up with the
      demand created by recent legislation.

      B.  EPA should thoroughly reexamloe its current approach and metho-
          dology for technology transfer and training In the ground water
           area,
      While  this  activity  should be  centered  in  the Office  of  Research  and
      Development,  the  responsibility  should  be  shared  by the  EPA program
      offices.  The Committee encourages  the  use of information specialists
      in achieving  the  goal  of effective  communication  of available tech-
      nology,  research  results and data to ground water professionals and
      managers  throughout  the Nation.

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                                -30-
C.  The., Coiaplttee recommends that 1PA establish a National Center
    for Ground Water Training*

This should be an in-house center for technical training, staffed by as
few as two or three full-tine employees, supplemented by scientists
from EFA, and elsewhere.  A possible solution could be the resurrection
of the training facility that once existed at SS1ERL.  Training should
be mimed primarily at EFA in-house staff, and available to government
employees at the State and local level.  Taped TV courses about regula-
tory issues such as 1C1A permits, Superfund site clean-up or ACL deter-
minations could also be included in the curriculum,

D.  The Committee reeonmendg__ broader availability of research reports
    and guidance documents*

This would-include a stronger effort in selection and publication of
more research reports and guidance docunents rather than just research
summaries, and availability  through SPA sources rather  than just through
NfIS, which does not provide quality service.  Such documents are cata-
logued by NWA; training should be provided to IPA personnel in accessing
such a computerized information base.

Also included would be  the  establishment  of formal linkages  to informa-
tion available at  other Federal agencies, such as the USGS "Ground Water
Site Inventory,

E*  The Committee  recommends increased technology transfer among EPA
    laboratoriesT  Regional  offices and State  regulatory agencies*

The Committee recommends  an annual  combined presentation at  each Regional
office  by  laboratory  personnel  fro* each ground  water  research facility.
The audience should include those Involved in such ground water-related
programs as  DIC,  CBtCLA,  RCEA,  LOST and the  implementation  of  the  ground
water strategy.   State and  local personnel should be' encouraged to
attend.  This series  of presentations  would  not  only provide a meaos
 of updating  Federal and State field personnel on advances in ground
water research,  but would also be the  basis  for input  to the research
 laboratories.  Although these conferences would require a considerable
 amount of  staff tine, cross-fertilization and training would make this
 time highly productive.

 F,  Aa described more fully in the transport and fate section of this
     report,  the Committee recommends that EPA continue technology trans^
     fer activities on Information cataloging,and retrieval (now via
     MWWA)  and on transport/transformation models (now via HolGOmbJle-
     search Institute)«

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                                     BI-
                                  SECTION V


                   POLICY ASPECTS OF GROUND WATER SESEARCH
     This report has concentrated on evaluating the nature and adequacy of
the current research program, applying the tern "research" in its traditional
sense to support EPA's regulatory responsibilities in the protection of
ground water quality.  The basic conclusion of the Committee is that such
research should be substantially increased.  In addition to reviewing these
research issues, however, the Committee was asked by the Deputy Administrator
to make recommendations on information needs for policy development.  Because
both the efforts and the expertise of the Committee have been focused predom-
Inantly on the research program itself, our review of prospective policy
issues and related information needs has been limited.  Nonetheless, the
Committee believes that EPA faces substantial needs to collect factual data
and conduct studies to strengthen the informational foundation on which
future policy decisions will be made.

     The many statutes which authorize EPA to protect ground water have been
listed already in Section II of this report.  An undesirable feature of this
regulatory framework is  that it is a patchwork of disconnected programs.
Nearly all of the statutes originally were written, and subsequently have
been implemented, with little explicit focus on the objective of ground water
protection.  Although these  laws all pertain to ground water, they have no
theme of consistency linking them together.  They also rest on a shallow
knowledge  base.

     As governmental efforts to protect ground water  gather momentum,
increasing numbers  of decisions on major  policy issues must be made.
Such decisions  should rest on a  solid  foundation  of knowledge  concerning
many basic questions.  These include!  Which  sources  of  ground water
contamination warrant greater emphasis?   Which  technologies promise the
best results for protection  or remediation?  What levels of protection or
remediation  are technologically  feasible? To what extent can sources  of
contamination  be reduced?  Can  exposure  of humans to  ground water  contam-
 inants be  accurately determined  or  predicted?  Can present and potential
health effects be quantified, and what are they?   Can institutional controls
 be developed to safeguard against human exposure?  Does  a scientific basis
 exist  to conclude that  compliance with proposed laws  and regulations is
 feasible?  What will such compliance cost? What is the dependence of different
 localities on ground water,  and what alternatives exist  to meet such needs?
 How much difference will protective controls and clean-up efforts make on
 the actual supply of clean ground water to meet those needs?  More detailed
 questions  arise with respect to individual policy issues.

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                                   -32-
     Any review of the current regulatory framework wist highlight dispar-
atles in the intensity and nature of efforts directed at different compo-
nents of the ground water quality problem.  More stringent requirements
generally are applied to selected point sources than to other categories,
as noted In the 1984 OTA report, and industrial hazardous waste »tt«s
receive much more emphasis (at far greater cost) than municipal landfills,
even though the latter may present equally serious problems.  Efforts
directed at petroleum residues and pesticides in ground water are in
their infancy.

     A major reason for the confusion and disparities which envelop the
subject of ground water protection is the speed with which concern over
ground water quality has emerged as an urgent public priority.  Intense
publicity of individual situations such as the contamination at Love
Canal has combined with public anxieties over the effects of hazardous
chemicals.  These have produced vigorous demands through our political
process for the rapid establishment of ground water protection controls.
The  speed of this process has exceeded the ability of existing institu-
tional capacities to provide  supporting data and analyses for the  complex
policy decisions which are required.

     Basic questions concerning  the goals of controls  arise under both ^
Superfund and  BCRA.  The  current raging debate  over  "how clean is  clean
under  Superfund illustrates  the  need  for  more  data on all the basic
issues  of risks,  costs, and  feasibilities.   Onder  EC1A,  EPA in its permit
regulations has  essentially  mandated  an absolutist approach of clean-up to
background  levels,  unless a  permit establishes  an  Alternate Concentration
Limit.   Confusion exists, however, as to  what  standards will be  applied
 to determine  when ACLs will  be granted and  what criteria they will
 employ.
      A more specific example of the information needs for Policy
 is presented by the requirement in the 1984 amendments to EC1A that EPA
 must examine every listed hazardous waste to determine whether land
 disposal of each waste should not be prohibited.  The statute establishes
 a series .pf tight deadlines for the completion of these decisions by EPA.
 In order to complete this decision making in a manner that wisely fulfills
 the public interest* KPA not only needs detailed knowledge concerning the
 hazardous characteristics of each waste but also rat have extensive
 information concerning all practicable alternatives for the handling and
 disposal of these wastes.  That includes vast quantities of data concern-
 tog the different circumstances under which such wastes oight be handled,
 the technologies available for treatment or disposal of such wastes, and
 the costs, energy implications, and other environmental impacts which may
 attach to each possible alternative.

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                                   -33-
     The EPA Ground Water Protection Strategy also raises a host of
 information aeeds.  A principal feature of  the strategy is to encourage
 the  classification of ground water,  the needs for hydrogeologic data on
 the  location, nature, and condition of aquifers  throughout the Country are
 obvious.   Systems for the collection of such data mist he developed, and
 numerous  supportive technical  capabilities  oust  be developed or  refined to
 complete  a physical evaluation of  misting  aquifers.  A thorough review
 of all information  requirements implicit  in SPA's proposed classification
 strategy  should be  undertaken  promptly.

      Underlying all of  the  policy  information  needs  suggested  by a review
 of pending regulatory decisions, statutory  requirements»  and  legislative
 proposals, is the basic and fundamental  need to  develop a acre thorough
 understanding of the  ground water  resource  itself.   A serious  limitation
 on prospects for the  successful development of ground water policy is the
 weakness of general understanding  concerning this  resource.   An urgent
 need is to transmit such knowledge as is possessed among  technical experts
 to policy officials and the general public.

      Sound policy decisions require an understanding of such features of
 the ground water resource as its rates of flow under differing circum-
 stances, its quantities, Its recharge rates, the rates of dispersion and
 attenuation of contaminants within the ground water system, and its
 current quality.  Although there is widespread  recognition of the jenerjl
 dependence of society on ground water, a more sophisticated and detailed
, knowledge is required as to the extent and  nature of that dependence in
 differing localities.

      The  research described in earlier portions of  this report  should
 address many of these  information aeeds.   Such  research should  be planned
 not  only  to  support the implementation of  current programs but  *»°  £
 provide guidance for future policy decisions.   Many essential ingredients
 to  the policy  decisions, however, lie outside the limits of the technical
 ground water research  program. To a  limited  extent,  these needs  »y be
 mec by studies conducted by the Office  of  Technology Assessment,  SPA s
 Office of Policy Analysis,  or others.   In  the view  of the Committee,  the
 current  level  of attention to these  needs  for policy information  is
 inadequate when matched against the  dynamic state of policy  formulation
  in  this field.

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                                                               APPENDIX A
                   U.S.  ENVIRONMENTAL  PROTECTION AGENCY

                          SCIENCE ADVISORY BOARD

                  GROUND MATER RESEARCH REVIEW COMMITTEE
Mr. John Quarles
Morgan Lewis & Bockius
Washington, D.C.
                                 CHAIRMAN
                                VICE-CHAIRMAN
Dr. James Davidson
University of Florida
Gainesville, PL
                                  MEMBERS
 Dr.  .Joan Berkowitz
 Arthur D. Little,  Inc.
 Cambridge, HA

 Or.  Lenore Clesceri
 Biology Department
 Rensselaer Polytechnical Institute
 Troy, NY

 Ms. Mary Gearhart
 Colorado Department of Health
 Denver, CO

 Dr. Raymond C. Loehr
 University of Texas
 Austin,  TX

 Mr. David Miller
 Geraghty and Miller
 Syosset, NY
  Dr. James Harris
 'CIBA-GeifY
  MelntOSh, AL
Dr. Keros Cartwright
Illinois State Geological survey
Champaign, IL

Mr. Richard A. Conway
Corporate Development Fellow
Onion Carbide Corporation
Charleston, WV
Dr. Jay
National Water Well Association
Worthington, OH

Dr. James  Mercer
GeoTrans ,  Inc .
Herndon, VA
 Dr. lath Neff
 Safe Growth Tea»
 State of Tennessee
 Nashville, TN

 Mr. Thomas Prickett.
 Thomas Frickett, Inc*
 Urban* , IL
                               IXECOTIVS SECRETARY
  Mr, Harry C, Torno
  D.S> Envirott»ental Protection Agency
  Washington? D.C,

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                                                           APPENDIX B
                    GROUND-WATER RESEARCH PROGRAMS




                   OFFICE  OF  RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT




                  U.S.  ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY






                           JANUARY 15,  1985











(Prepared by the Office of Environmental Processes and  Effects  Research)

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                    TABLE  OP  CONTENTS






                                                        Page
Introduction
      Scope ........ . . ............................. * •    B-1




      Management ...... ...... • • ........ • • • ...........    B~2



      Coordination with Other Federal Agencies  ......    S-3




      Resources ..........•••••..•-*»••»»»••*••••••••    ^-3




Monitoring . . * . . ............ - * .......................    B"3



      Ground-Water Sampling .................... .....    B-4




      Geophysics .......... . ...... ...... ..... . .......    B~*




      Data Analysis ..... ......................... •••    B~4




Prediction  ..... ....... - ..... * ...... * .......... ......     8-5



      Hydrologlc Processes . ........ - ..... ...... .....     B-6




      Abiotic Processes ..... ............. • ...... » • • •     B~6



      Biotic Processes .,...»....*........*...»•***»     ^""'




Aquifer Cleanup ........ ................ ...... ..... »•    B~"



Hazardous Waste Engineering  ... .......... . ........ • • •    B-9




      Land  Disposal ...... ..... .............. ••• .....    B~9



      Uncontrolled Site Cleanup ..... ........ ........    B-ll

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                               iNTtODUCTtON


     Many kinds of information are needed by the Environmental Protection
Agency and the States for developing, implementing,  and evaluating the
progress of ground-water protection programs.  In general, ground-water
protection programs need to:

  -  determine the number and types of sources

  -  assess the extent and nature of current and potential contamination

  -  predict and/or measure the resulting concentrations of contaminants
       in water supplies

  -  ascertain the health implications of those concentrations

  -  compare the  capabilities and costs of alternative prevention measures
         (source control and management)

  -  determine the capabilities and  costs of cleanup measures

  -  evaluate program effectiveness

this is  a description of  research carried out by  the Office of Research  and
Development  (QED) to meet these needs.

SCOPE

     Our science  for assessing and  predicting the Impacts of  ground-water
pollution is growing.  In the past  few years important gains  have been
made by the  EPA Ground  Water Research Program in technology  for  accessing
the  subsurface and taking samples  that are  uncontaminated by  the sampling
process.  Further, we know  reasonably well how  a few organic  chemicals
of  concern behave in a  few  geological materials.  However, the state-of-
 the-art for ground-water monitoring is cumbersome,  expensive, and insuff-
 iciently precise.  Our  capability for predicting the behavior of organic
 and microbiological contaminants is limited.  Finally, there is  little
 information available on the effectiveness or the costs of methods for
 in-situ cleanup of already  polluted aquifers,  the  EFA GroumMfatcr
 Research Program consists of research addressing the needs in these
 three areas; monitoring, prediction, and cleanup,

      Other ORD research programs are also contributing towards decision-
 making on ground-water problems.  In particular, our hazardous waste
 engineering research is developing and evaluating technology for control
 of  some  of  the most  important sources of ground-water contamination.
 This program also provides ways to clean up sites already contaminated
 vith hazardous wastes.

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                                   B-2
     A significant portion of the research on the health effects  and
removal of drinking water contaminants Is directed towards chemicals
found in ground water.  Since many contaminants occur in both surface and
ground water, and since technology and health research needs are  the sane
for both, it does not make sense to develop a separate ground-water
health and technology research program.  Consequently, this description of
the IPA ground-water-related research does not include these programs.
Likewise  the major research activities under way to improve out  capability
to analyze a water sample for its contaminant concentrations are  independent
of whether the water Is surface or ground water, so these are also not
described.
MANAGEMENT
     Ground-water research has many clients.  The EPA Program Offices
with responsibilities in ground water include the Office of Water (Safe
Drinking Water Act; Clean Water Act), the Office of Pesticides and Toxic
Substances  (Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act; Toxic
Substances  Control Act), and the Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
Response (Resource Conservation and Recovery Act; Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation  and Liability Act),  The EPA Regional Offices
complete the  list of EPA clients.  As emphasized by the EPA Ground-Water
Protection  Strategy, however, perhaps the even more important clients
are the State and local officials who must make their own decisions about
ground water  protection, management, and cleanup.  Our research is providing
tools  for decision-making at all  levels  to enhance assessment and management
of ground-water problems.

      To ensure  that  our research  programs are designed to meet  the needs
of our EPA  clients,  the Office  of  Research and Development has  established
 Research Committees.   There is  one for  each  Program Office,  and each  has
 Regional representatives.   We have also established a Cooperative Agreement
 with the National Governor's Association to  provide  a mechanism for
 interactions with the States on research needs.

      Since the major funding for ground-water research  comes from the
 Safe Drinking Water Act and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act,
 we have established in addition a Ground-Water Research Planning  Group
 which reports to both the Water Research Committee and  the Hazardous
 Waste/Superfund Research Committee.  This group advises ORD on the planning
 of ground-water monitoring, prediction, and cleanup research.  We have
 made  Sure  that all interested EPA clients are represented.  In addition
 to ORD personnel, participants are included from:
 office  of Ground-Water Protection
 Office  of Drinking Water
 Office  of Solid Waste
 Office  of Emergency  and Remedial Response
 Office  of Waste Programs  Enforcement
 Office  of Pesticide  Programs
 Office  of Toxic Substances
 Office  of Policy, Planning, and Evaluation
 Regions I,  IV, VI,  and X

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                                   B-3
     The Office of Research and Development conducts Its programs via
fourteen laboratories and several field stations.   Each laboratory conducts
its own research as well as funds research at other institutions, including
universities and colleges, consulting and engineering firms,  State and
other Federal laboratories, associations, and private industry.   The
laboratories whose ground-water related programs are described here are
the Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory-Las Vegas,  the
Robert S. Kerr Environmental Research Laboratory-Ada, and the Hazardous
Waste Engineering Research Laboratory-Cincinnati.

COORDINATION WITH OTHER FEDERAL AGENCIES

     In addition to designing a research program to satisfy multiple
client needs, ORD works with other Federal Agencies concerned with ground-
water problems.  The major funding of Federal ground-water research is
through the U.S.  Geological Survey (USGS).  A Memorandum of Understanding
between EPA and USGS was completed in August, 1981, and provides an
umbrella under which each Agency's programs  are formally coordinated.
Ground water, of course, is a major element  of that coordination.  We
conduct joint research  projects with several other  agencies, including
the  U.S. Air Force,  the U.S. Army, Department of Energy, and the National
Research Council.

RESOURCES  (Fiscal Year  1985, President's Budget)

   Research Area                Total Dollars           Man-Years
                                (in  thousands)

   Monitoring                        1763.0                9.4

   Prediction                        6307.1                31.0

   Aquifer Cleanup                   853.6                 6-7

    Hazardous Waste                  9272.0                46.2
      Engineering	              —	—

    TOTALS                         18,195.7                93.3


                                 MONITORING


      The Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory in Las Vegas is
 conducting ground-water monitoring research to support the Underground
 Injection Control (UIC) Regulations of the Safe Drinking Water Act and
 the Ground-Water Protection Regulations of the Resource Conservation and
 Recovery Act.  Spin-off from these programs has established a geophysical
 technical support program to assist Superfund hazardous waste site
 investigations.  This  research may also offer techniques  to detect leaks
 from underground storage tanks.

      The  program includes research  in  three primary areas:  ground-water moni-
 toring and sampling methods in both the unsaturated and saturated zones, the

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                                   1-4
application of surface and downhole geophysics to subsurface characterization,
and data interpretation and analysis.  Quality assurance is addressed iu all
areas-

GROUND-WATER SAMPLING

     Research In this area is directed towards the development; and evaluation
of ground-water sampling and monitoring methods and providing operating
guidance to program office, regional office and state agencies.  The program
includes research in;

     0 Sources of variance of ground-water data

     0 The validity and performance of indicator parameters

     0 Monitoring well construction methods

     0 Vadose zone monitoring techniques

     0 Advanced monitoring techniques  such as laser fiber  optics

     D Ground-water flow measurement."

GEOPHYSICS

     This program includes research  Into  the geophysical and  geochemical
detection and napping of shallow contaminant plunes with both surface-based
and  downhole methods, the more  difficult  problem of mapping deeply-hurled
contaminant plumes associated with injection wells, and the location of
abandoned wells*

      In  the area of  surface-based geophysical  techniques,  research will demon-
strate and evaluate  geophysical and  geochemical  methods for detection and  map-
ping of  subsurface  leachate  and ground-water  contaminant  plumes.   In the area
of downhole sensing,  the  research objectives  are to survey, develop, test,
and evaluate  downhole sensors  and methods which  can be used for hazardous
waste site monitoring and for  preconstraction hydrogeologic investigations,
 principally using small-diameter, shallow-depth boreholes.  In the area of
mapping fluids  from injection  wells, several  techniques ate  being evaluated
 for use on deeply buried  contaminant plumes.   In the  area of  locating abandoned
wells, magnetometers along with aerial photography are being  evaluated for
 locating abandoned wells  in the vicinity of proposed  new injection wells.

 DATA ANALYSIS

      Research in this area primarily Involves the development and evaluation
 of statistical methods for data analysis and monitoring network design,
 including:

      8 Appropriate applications of elementary statistics

      8 Improved techniques for probabilistic kriging

      0 Optimum sample size, estimation

      " Methods for data presentation.

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                                   B-5
                                PREDICTION
     The Robert S* Kerr Environmental Research Laboratory (RSKEML) has the
responsibility for developing the scientific knowledge of pollutant
behavior in the subsurface that peraits intelligent Management of ground
water resources.  Management considerations include the ability to identify,
evaluate, amd control potential sources of ground-water contamination; to
assess the risks and impacts associated with emergency spill situations
and other contamination events; and to take remedial action in tne
restoration of ground water quality.

     The processes that govern the transport and fate of pollutants in the
subsurface can be divided for research purposes into three major areas?  CD
hydrologie, (2) abiotic, and (3) biotic.  These processes will act to influence
the movement of water, the primary vehicle for subsurface pollutant movement;
the physical and  chemical interactions that will cause pollutants  to move at
rates different from those of the water; and the decomposition, chemical or
microblal, that will transform the pollutants in the subsurface to nontoxic
substances.  The  elucidation of  the magnitude of the various mechanisms
functioning in  the three process areas will ultimately provide the knowledge
to Integrate the  influences of these  processes into a singular understanding
of pollutant behavior  in the subsurface.   Research under each of  these  process
areas is organized into a series of  tasks  focusing on methods development
subsurface  characterization, pollutant attenuation, process kinetics, field
application and mathematical model development and application.

      It must  be realized that  the division of  subsurface processes into three
 types  (i.e.,  hydrologic, abiotic, biotic)  is  an arbitrary  division primarily
 for  organizational purposes.   An effective research  program must address the
interdependency of and Interaction  between these  processes.

HYDEQLOGIC  PROCESSES

      Research at RSKIEL in hydrologie processes  is directed in three areas;
 (1)  expanding our understanding of  the physics of fluid flow through porous
 media,  <2)  developing methodology for evaluating the degree of heterogeneity
 (spatial variability)  both physically and chemically in the subsurface and
 (3)  advancing the mathematical techniques for forecasting the spatial and
 temporal distibution of chemicals in the subsurface as well as fluid fluxes
 in the subsurface environment,

      During the  past two decades, considerable research has been conducted on
 the movement of water through subsurface porous media.  The physics of water
 flow is reasonably well understood for homogeneous media.  Environmental
 problems, however, oust be analyied where there are many discontinuities In
 porous media as  well as the fluid phases.  These  discontinuities can result
 in strong accelerating influences on ground water recharge as well as  chemical
 transport flow counter to the mass movement of the water.  Current tSKEU,
 research is trying to Improve our understanding of how  immiscible fluids will
 move through  porous aedia and the impact  of the im»iscible fluids on the
 physical properties of the porous media.

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                                   B-6
     To analyze the magnitude ami importance of spatial variability in the
subsurface environment requires:  the development of methodology for obtaining
unaltered samples of subsurface material for physical, chemical and biological
analysis; th« evaluation of the impact of spatial variability on the transport
processes and chemical and biological reactions; and evaluation of statistical
techniques for determining how many samples are required to Ascribe a
tardrologic system and where the next sample should be taken to obtain the
t4l«um refinement in ati understanding of the overall system,  this whole area
of research is just beginning to receive RSKERL funding and the full significance
to describing and predicting pollutant movement, remains to be defined.  Tbe
complexity of the subsurface and the difficulty of obtaining representative
samples have hindered progress  in this area.

     There are presently over 400 documented mathematical models describing
movement of fluids in the  subsurface.  These range from very simple analytical
solutions compatible with  hand-held  calculators  to highly complex  numerical
models that require large  nain-fram* computers  to operate.  The majority  of
these models are for  the movement of water  and  the  transport of chemicals
miscible with water.  Current activities of tSKERL  to advance  the  capabilities
for  modeling fluid  transport  are devoted principally to  development  of  techniques
to describe the  transport  of  immiscible fluids.  The Palpal ™»* *
model  information transfer is the International Ground Water Modeling Center
(IGWMC)  at Butler University.   The Center maintains  annotated  data bases  of
mathematical models used  to simulate fluid  movement and  contaminant  transport,
offers hands-on  training  courses and conducts  research to  develop  benchmark
methods  for  the  intercomparison and  validation of  existing models,

ABIOTIC  PROCESSES

      The abiotic processes of primary concern to RSKE1L are sorption/
 partitioning and chenical degradation.  Emphasis to date has been on f^S^f   ^
 our knowledge of the sorption process.  Knowledge of the sorbate  sorbent, and
 solvent characteristics that affect the rate and degree of sorption will
 permit refinement of models describing transport and fate of pollutants in
 the subsurface.   Empirical and semi-empirical relationships developed to
 estimate the sorption of hydrophobic organic pollutants fro» aqueous solutions
 onto surface soils and sediments are being evaluated to determine their
 efficacy for predicting the sorptive interactions of these compounds on deeper
 subsurface soils and geologic materials.   Several investigations have observed
 that currently  available  theory and models often fail to describe the sorption
 of  hydrophobic  organic solutes on soils having very  low organic carbon content or
 wherfthe clay  mineral to organic carbon ratio  is very large.  Various techniques
 are being used  to determine  the relative contributions of mineral and organic
 soil components.  These techniques  involve the  use  of state-of-the-art
 instrumentation such as Laser  Raman and Fourier Transform Infrared spectrometer
 equipment, and  include application  of High Pressure Liquid Chromatographic
 methods for investigating sorption  in dynamic,  flow-through systems as well
 as  conventional laboratory procedures for  measuring sorption  in static systems-

      Because  of the  complex  nature  of many environmental  contaminants, it is
 important  to  understand  the contributions  of  various phase  interactions  to
 the behavior  of chemicals In subsurface environments.   Interactions  which
 must be considered are sorbate-sorbent, solvent-sorbent,  sorbate-sorbate,

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                                   B-7
solvent-solvent, and sorbate-solvent.  The sorbate-sorbent interaction, or
sorption, has been intensively studied; however, most of the work has been
done in relatively simple systems consisting of an aqueous solution of a
single solute.  Little is known about the influence of solvent or sorbate
mixtures on the sorption process.  Thus, a major effort of the abiotic research
program is to quantify the phase interactions in complex, but realistic,
environmental systems; to develop theories to describe sorption in light of
these interactions; and to incorporate this knowledge into predictive models.

     Another Important aspect of the sorption process is the rate at which it
occurs.  Most chemical transport and fate models in use assuae that the
sorption process is instantaneous.  Laboratory and field experiments have
clearly shown the  fallacy of  this assumption for many solute-soil coabinations.
Two basic hypotheses have been prepared to explain non-equilibrium sorption
in dynamic porous  media systems.  The  first of  these is that the kinetics of
the reaction are slow relative to the  rate of movement of  the chemical through
the system.  The second hypothesis  is  that the  rate of approach  to equilibrium
is controlled by the diffusion of the  sorbate from the solution  to the site
of adsorption.  To date, neither theory adequately describes the observed
behavior of many environmentally significant chemicals.

      The chemical  or  abiotic  transformation of  pollutants  is an  important
process  which must be addressed  in  any comprehensive subsurface  transport and
fate  research program.  However, almost no  comprehensive  studies of  chemical
transformation  processes are  currently in progress.  Fragmentary information
available  in this  area  suggests  that hydrolysis,  reduction,  and  possibly
nucleophillc substitution  are potentially important  process  es in  ground water.
Movement of  ground water can be  extremely slow, therefore, transformations
which have half-lives in the  order  of years may be the most  significant
 attenuating processes in these systems.

      The greatest impediment to  the study of  abiotic transformation is the
 lack of techniques for adequately uieasuring the in-situ chemistry of the
 subsurface.   Tools and procedures must be developed for assessing the potential
 for and measuring the extent of chemical reactions  In this remote environment.

 BIOTIC PROCESSES

      The RSKERL research efforts in the biotic processes category are
 focused on developing necessary information on subsurface biotic processes
 to predict the transport, fate, and impact of pollutants  in the subsurface
 and to develop control and remedial technology for ground water quality.
 Considerable progress has been made in recent years by RSKESL and associated
 grantees in developing methods  for obtaining uncontaminated samples,  in
 developing new techniques and procedures for characterizing subsurface  biota,
 and in developing technology for determining how biological processes affect
 pollutant transport and fate.   However,  improvement is needed in all of  these
  areas.
       Current  information indicates  that  the  deeper  subsurface environment  is
  not  sterile but harbors  significant populations  of  microorganisms  and that there
  nay  be considerable  spatial  variation in these populations  both from a qualitative
  and  quantitative standpoint.  These conclusions, however, are based on a
  very limited  number  of studies and  far more  information on  the distribution,
  density  and  nature  of organisms in the  subsurface, both above and below the

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                                   1-8
water table, Is needed.  Future studies should emphasize correlating the
occurrence and activities of organising with the geological and mineralogical
properties and the environmental conditions of the subsurface regions where
the organisms exist.

     At present little is known about biodegradation of organic pollutants in
the deeper subsurface.  A limited amount of pollutant biodegradation research
has been done using the indigenous flora of the subsurface and foreign
pollutants; virtually no work has been accomplished in situ.  These results
'have indicated that the potential for significant biodegradation  of a number
of compounds exists.  However, the question remains unanswered as  to ^e
degree  to which these  reactions will proceed  in the subsurface..  The limitations
have not been clearly  defined to be either thermodynamlc  (energy-limited) or
kinetic (rate-limited) nor  has  the extent of  adaptation and  co-metabolism been
investigated in detail.  Very little is known concerning  degradation byproducts
or whether  degradation processes can be manipulated.

     Little is known  concerning environmental conditions  in  subsurface  habitats
and  the effect  such conditions  have on  biological activity and  the Motic
transformation  of pollutants.   Important  factors governing the  extent  and/or
nature of biological  activity  include  (1)  the concentration  and utility of
electron  acceptors;  (2)  the concentration and availability of essential
nutrients:  (3)  the oxidation-reduction potential;  (4)  the pH; (5) the  ionic
 composition;  (6)  the  availability of water;  (7)  the temperatere;  (8)  the
 hydrostatic pressure; (9)  the  nature  of the solid  phase;  and (10) the  nature
 of  the pore space.  AH of  the above  factors  interact with  each other  to
 influence the activity of  organisms in the subsurface.

      Blodegradability and the associated kinetic relationships should be
 determined prior to development and use of mathematical models for predicting
 the movement and fate of pollutants in the subsurface environment.  Vola-
 tilization and sorptlon should be determined to predict biodegradation, since
 a mass balance is required.  Reaction kinetics should be determined for
 modeling.  Studies are, required to determine; (1) the effect of concentration
 of pollutant on  the rate law for transformation; (2) the effect of concentration
 of pollutant on  the density of alcrobes active against that  pollutant; and
 (3) the correlation between .the rate of transformation of the pollutant and
 the density of viable microbes, or the concentration of  some biochemical
 constituent of the microbes used as an indicator of biomass  or nutritional
 state.  Current  Information is scant,

      To use laboratory and field information about subsurface  biotic  reactions
 to  predict the fate  of pollutants requires the development  of mathematical
 submodels  that describe the kinetics of biological transformations in  the  sub-
' surface, and which can be  incorporated into  more sophisticated mass transport
 models describing water movement and abiotic attenuation of pollutants.

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                                   B-9
                             AQUIFER CLEANUP


     RSKERL's research dealing specifically with aquifer restoration supports
six tnhouse and extramural projects in FY '85.   The National Water Well
Association is preparing a report, which is due In May 1985, to assist
decision makers In dealing with contaminated ground water which is a
public water supply.  The report will discuss various alternatives available,
their cost effectiveness, and the institutional problems associated with
the Implementation of various options.  Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory is
developing a report, also due in the spring of 1985, to assist agencies
involved in cleanup of contaminated ground water In evaluating "how clean
is clean "  The report will evaluate the incremental benefits versus
incremental costs of cleaning up a waste site.  The University of Tennessee
is evaluating the feasibility of enhancing the in-sltu biological degradation
of contaminants in ground water by the use of genetically-engineered
organisms,  A project with Florida State University is being Initiated to
studv the occurrence and ecology of organisms necessary  for the in-situ
cleanup of contaminated aquifers.  An inhouse project at RSKERL Is underway
to evaluate  the use of simulated aquifers  for developing in-situ biological
cleanup methods for such contaminants as nitrates and synthetic chemicals.
A major Inhouse and extramural effort Is underway at ISKE1L and Stanford
University to develop an in-situ biological process for  restoration of
ground water contaminated with  trichloroethylene and related organic
compounds*


                       HAZAiDOUS WASTE  ENGINEERING


     A major  source  of  ground-water pollution  is  the disposal  of hazardous
waste.  The  Hazardous Waste Engineering Research Laboratory (HW1RL)  in
Cindnnatti, Ohio has  two programmatic  areas  that  support  research and
 development  of hazardous waste source control.   The first  program is in
 support  of the Resource  Conservation and Recovery  Act  (RCRA)  and  Is
 concerned with the  disposal of hazardous waste In landfills,  surface
 impoundments, and other geologic storage facilities..  The second  program
 is in support of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation
 and Liability Act (Superfund) and is concerned with the development of
 technology for the  cleanup of uncontrolled hazardous waste sites.
 LAND DISPOSAL
     The hazardous waste land disposal research program is collecting data
 necessary to support Implementation of disposal guidelines mandated by the
 Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (SCRA), PL 94-580.  This
 program relating to landfills,.surface impoundments, and geologic storage
 encompasses state-of-the-art documents, laboratory analysis, economic
 assessment, bench and pilot studies, and full-scale field verification
 studies.  The results of this  research are reported as Technical Resource
 Documents (TED's) In support of the RCRA Guidance Documents.  These
 documents will be used to provide guidance for conducting the review and
 evaluation of land disposal penult applications.  The wrk can be divided
 into  the following areas?- (1) Landfills*  cover systems, waste  leaching,
 liners  and waste modification; (2) Surface  Impoundments! assessment of
 design  and.-containment systems; (3) Geologic Storage, e.g., underground
 mines and salt domes.

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                                   B-10
Landfills
    Cover Systems-^The objective of this activity is to develop and evaluate
the effectiveness of various cover systems in relation to their functional
requirements for actual field application.  Validation efforts are being
performed in the laboratory and field with model work development being
pursued for eventual incorporation into a T1D.

    Waste Leaching—The objective of this activity is to develop and evaluate
laboratory techniques for working with a sample of a waste or a mixture of
wastes to predict the composition of actual leaehates obtained under field
conditions.  Results from laboratory and model predictions are being compared
with results from pilot scale and field scale work to develop better
procedures and a«t updated TED on waste leaching.
    Clay Soil Liners—The objective of this activity is  to evaluate the
effectiveness of clay soils  as  liners and surface caps  to contain  or minimize
leachate movement and infiltration and to predict performance with time.
Laboratory and field studies are being performed to develop  tools  for
predicting and evaluating performance of soil liners.

    Flexible Membrane Liners-^The  objective of  this activity is  to evaluate
the effectiveness of  synthetic  membranes or flexible membranes as  liners  and
caps  to  contain  leaehates/moisture infiltration and to  predict their
performance with time.  Both laboratory and field efforts are  developing
 tools  to establish  flexible  membrane  liner performance  criteria.

    Waste Modification—The  objective of  this activity  is  to evaluate  the
effectiveness  of chemical  stabilization and  encapsulation processes  relating
 to improving handling;  reducing surface  areaj limiting  solubility; detoxifying
 pollutants; and  predicting performance with time.  Validation efforts  in
 the laboratory and  field will correlate  compatibility  of the individual
 processes to  specific waste types  and predict durability and leaching
 performance with time.   Information produced will be  published in a  T1D.

 Surface Impoundments

     The surface impoundment research program has been developed to provide a
 comprehensive understanding of the design,  operation,  and maintenance of
 aurface impoundments as options for hazardous waste disposal.  Information is
 being developed on the use of natural soils as liners and dikes.  Also, the
 correlation of laboratory measurements with the construction standards
 achievable in the field is being investigated.   Of particular interest Is the
 degree to which specification  of construction techniques and inspection
 practice can influence uniformity and performance of the finished impoundment.

 Geologic Storage

     The  objective of this activity is to update the state-of-the-art
 technology on the use of underground mines for emplacement  of hazardous
 waste.   Efforts are being pursued  both by literature review and planned  field
 demonstration.  An evaluation  of  other geologic storage options are also being
 investigated, e.g., salt domes.

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                                   B-ll
UNCONTROLLED SITE CLEANUP

    The Land Pollution Control Division (LPCD), BWERL, has the responsibility
for the control development program in support of Superfund.  The LPCP
research and development program has been organized to correspond with the
Superfund legislation. I.e., the Releases Control Branch deals with removal
actions (emergencies), and the Containment Branch deals with remedial
actions.  The program is one of technology development and asessment to
determine cost and effectiveness, adaptation of technologies to the
uncontrolled waste site problem, field evaluation of technologies that show
promise, development of guidance material for  the EPA Office of Emergency and
Remedial Response COIRR), technical assistance to OERR, and EPA Regional
Offices.

Removal (Emergency) Action

    This program has been divided into three major areas of activity:
(1) Personnel Health and Safety; (2) Evaluation of Equipment; and
(3) Chemical Countermeasures.  The goal  of  the personnel health and
safety activity  is  to develop  protective equipment and procedures for
personnel working on  land or underwater  in  environments which are known
or suspected  to  be  Immediately dangerous to life or  health, so that
personnel  can conduct operations related to investigating,  monitoring,  or
cleaning up hazardous substances*

    The goal  of  the equipment  evaluation activity  is to modify, adapt,  and
 field test  hazardous  substances  spill  control equipment for appropriate
utilization for removal action at  uncontrolled dump  sites.  Examples of this
 equipment  are the mobile incinerator,  modular transportable incinerator,
 carbon regenerator, and soils  washer*

     The soal of the chemical count emeasures  activity Is  to evaluate the
 efficiency of in-situ physical/chemical/biological treatment  of  large volumes
 of subsurface soils and large relatively quiescent waterbodies forthe purpose
 of controlling the hazardous contaminants within those media.  Technical
 criteria for the use of chemicals and other additives to control hazardous
 release situations are being developed.

 Remedial Action

     This program is designed to assist  the Office of Emergency and Remedial
 Response, Regional Offices, States, and industry to meet the challenge of
 protecting the public from  the environmental  effects of uncontrolled hazardous
 waste sites.  The major emphasis of the program Is  to take  off-the-sheit
 technology and  adapt It to  the uncontrolled hazardous waste site situation.
 Many  existing technologies, such as those used In the construction  Industry,
 wastewater treatment, and spill cleanup, can  be applied to uncontrolled  waste
 sites.  However, their  application must be tested,  cost and effectiveness
 determined, and limitations understood  so  that they may be effectively and
 economically utilized.  It  is a major function of this program to evaluate
 these techniques and combine  them into  cost-effective remedial actions for  the
 various situations found at uncontrolled waste sites.

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                                   B-12
    This program has been divided into four areas of activity:  (1)  Survey
anil Assessment of Current Technologies; (2} Laboratory and Site Design
Analysis; (3) Field Evaluation and Verification of Techniques; and (4)
Technical Handbooks.

    Survey mud Assessment of Current Technologies—Ttie goal of this activity
is to review and evaluate the effectiveness of remedial action long-term
control techniques  that are being used and have been used to contain
pollutants at uncontrolled hazardous waste sites.  Analyses Include defining
the site specific problem, determining the problems associated with
implementing the techniques, determining the effectiveness, and identifying
costs.  This activity also includes the development and use of models.

    Laboratory and  Site Design Analysis—The goal of this activity is to
perform  laboratory  studies to simulate field conditions and evaluate  the
adequacy of adapting the  lab control technology  schemes to actual  field
conditions.

    Field Evaluation and  Verification  of Techniques—The  goal of  this activity
is  to field test control  technology techniques  that look  very Pf
test  the technique  being  installed to  determine performance with  ti»
vaUdate promising  control techniques  being developed  hy  lab  and  pilot

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                                                                 APPENDIX c
       SUMMARY OF FEBBML AGENCY,  ELECTRIC  POWER RESEARCH INSTITUTE MB
         AMERICAN PETROLEUM INSTITUTE GROUND WATER RESEARCH  PROGRAMS

                       (Prepared by Dr.  James Davidson)

     Although no Federal laws and few state laws have ground water contamina-
tion as their major focus, there are many Federal and State  statutes  that can
control or mitigate ground water contamination.  The legal franework  for
Federal agencies to protect ground water Is a group of statutes aimed primar-
ily at other environmental problems that focus indirectly on ground water.
Because of this lack of focus and the diversity of sources for ground water
contamination, numerous Federal and state agencies are involved in ground
water research.  Agencies which support ground water research internally
and/or extramurally are as follows:

Environmental Protection Agency

     Most ground water  research programs in  the Environmental Protection
Agency are under the responsibility of the Office of Research and Development.
Fund/to support this program come fro* the  Safe Drinking Water Act (SBWA) of
•1974 and the  Resource Conservation and Recovery Act  (RCRA) of 1976.  wo
internal research  committees advise the Office of Research and Development
(ORD) regarding  ground  water research needs.   These  committees are (i)  tne
Hazardous Waste  Research  Committee and  (11)  the Water Research Committee.  The
Office of Research and  Development directs programs  in fourteen laboratories
and at several  field stations.   In addition  to designing a  research  program
to satisfy multiple client needs* ORD works  with other federal agenci«*
concerned with ground water.    A Memorandum of Understanding between EPA and
the US Geological  Survey (USGS)  was  established  in August 1981  and  provides
atl umbrella  under which the  agencies  programs are formally  coordinated.  EFA
also  conducts joint research projects with several  other agencies, including
 the US Air Force,  the US Department  of  Energy, and  the National Research
Council.

      EPA laboratories with major responsibilities in the area of  ground water
 quality  are  the Environmental  Monitoring Systems ^atorr-LasVegas/^f}'
 the  Robert  S. Kerr Environmental Research Laboratory-Ada (RSKERL), and the
 Hazardous Waste Engineering Research Laboratory-Cincinnati  (TOEtt).   Resources
 dedicated to research underway in these laboratories are as follows:

            Research Area        Total Dollars         Man-Years
           	"~~          (in 1000's)*

             Monitoring               1,763.0                 9.4

             Prediction              6,307.1                31

             Aquifer Cleanup or
               Restoration
                                       853.6                 6.7
             Hazardous Waste
                Engineering           jj_272 *°

                Totals               18,195.7

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                                   C-2
     The Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory (EMSL)  conducts
ground water monitoring research  to support the underground Injection
control regulations for the Safe Drinking Water Act and the  Ground Water
Protection Regulation of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act.
Spin-off from these programs has established geophysical technical support
to assist Superfund hazardous waste site investigations,  this research
also offers techniques to detect leaks fro* underground storage tanks.
The program supports research In three primary areas: ground water mon-
itoring and sampling methods in both unsaturated and saturated zones,
application of surface and downhole geophysics for subsurface charaeter-
izatioti and data Interpretation and analysis.  Quality assurance is
addressed in all areas.

     The Robert S. Kerr Environmental Research Laboratory (RSKERL) has
the responsibility for conducting investigations to provide technical
Information for those ground water  issues which are addressed in a number
of environmental laws.   Management considerations Include the ability to
identify, evaluate, and control potential sources of ground water contam-
ination, assess the risk and Impacts associated with emergency spill
situations and other  contamination  events;  and to  take  remedial action in
the restoration of ground water quality.  Research at RSKERt in hydrologic
processes is directed  toward three  areas;   (i) expanding the understanding
of the  physics of fluid flow through porous media,  (11) developing metho-
dology  for evaluating  the degree of heterogeneity  (spatial variability)
both  physically and chemically  in the subsurface and  (iil) advancing the
techniques for forecasting  the  spatial  and  temporal  distribution  of
chemicals in the subsurface as well as  fluid  fluxes  in  the  subsurface
environment*  Land treatment as  a source reduction technique  also is
studied at RSKERL.

      The Hazardous  Waste Engineering   Research  Laboratory  (WERL)  has
two  programmatic areas that support research and development  of hazardous
waste source  control.   The  first program is In the support  of Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act  (RC1A) and is concerned with  the disposal
of hazardous waste in landfills,  surface impoundments,  and  other  geologi
 cal storage  facilities;  alternatives  to land disposal are also developed.
The second program is In the support  of the Comprehensive Environmental
Response,  Compensation and Liability Act (Superfund) and is concerned
with the development  of technology  for the cleanup of uncontrolled
hazardous waste sites.

      In addition to the in-house programs conducted In the  above  three
 laboratories, EPA also provides extramural support for research programs
 outside the Agency,  Among these is the National Center for Ground Water
 Research, a consortium between Oklahoma University, Oklahoma State Uni-
 versity and Rice University.  In addition  to the National Ground Water
 Center, numerous grants and contracts support research in other univer-
 sities.  Some pertinent work is done at EBL-Athens, e.g. hydrolysis,
 adsorption, etc..

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                                   C-3
US Geological Survey_

     Ground water activities in the U.S. Geological Survey (BSGS) -are
multidiseiplitiary in nature and are related to many program elements In
the Environmental Protection Agency.  Ground water activities include
geology, hydraulics, water chemistry, hydrology, biology, geochemistry,
and ground water/surface water interactions.  In FY 1984 the total amount
of funding available to the Water Resources Division was approximately
$225  million (including appropriated funds, reimbursable funds, and
Batching funds from the States) — of this amount approximately $90
million was expended for the collection of ground water quantity, and to
a lesser extent, quality, data and for conducting ground water investiga-
tions   USGS Programs are intended to improve the understanding of the
hydrologic, geologic, geochemical and odcrobiologic processes that control
the movement, alteration and fate of toxic substances in ground water.
These'programs  receive approximately §8.5 million to support basic and
applied research in the proceeding areas.  The  dollars are used for both
in-house and extramural funding.

•US Department of Agriculture

     The current water quality research  commitment in the Agricultural
Research Service (MS) exceeds $6 million,  but  about ninety  percent is
devoted to  the  development  of  techniques  for assessing and enhancing  the
quality of  surface water.   The current AES  Program on ground water quality
can be  described under four major  categories;   (i) nutrients;  Cii)  pesti-
cides;  (iil)  salinity; and  (iv)  modeling.   Recent  progress in  ground
water quality  is based on advances  in  agricultural chemical  technology
and soil water  chemistry in eight  areas:  (i) efficiency  of usej  (ii)
 integrated  pest management; (ill)  improved chemical  disposal practices;
 (iv) environmental modeling,,  (v)  soil chemistry;  (vi)  salinity;  (vii)
 nutrients., and (viil) process models.   ASS has proposed a  plan to  expand
 their  ground water quality research.  The plan involves  an  estimated
 increase  of 25 man-years at a cost of  $5 million annually.

      The Cooperative State Research Service (GSRS) Involves  the State
 Agricultural Experiment  Stations at Land-Grant Universities in the United
 States.  This program has approximately 250 projects with a ground water
 research emphasis.  These projects are primarily concerned with water and
 contaminant transport in the unsaturated zone and the nodeling of these
 processes.  Approximately $1,75 million in state, Hatch and grant funds
 are spent for ground water research.

 US Department of Energy

      The US Department of Energy (DOB) is conducting a major ground water
 research program,  they are spending approximately $20 million per year
 on  source  control, $20 mil Ho*  per year on  aquifer clean up and  $10 mil-
 lion per year on monitoring.  Objectives of the program are to provide a
 base of fundamental scientific  information so  that the geochemical,
 hydrological and  biophysical mechanisms that contribute to  the transport

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                                   C-4
and long-term fate of energy-related contaminants in natural systems can
be understood and described.  Areas of emphasis include the understating
of geochemlcal processes and transport of energy-related organic compounds
and mixtures in the subsurface environment,  A proposed ten year program
to develop a "new generation" prediction model is being studied by the
agency.  The program involves the application of supercomputers, labora-
tory/university consortla and control field-scale experiments-  This
program proposal has been reviewed by the National Research Council's
Ground Water Committee and their recommendations returned to the Depart-
ment of Energy for consideration.
US Air Force
     The major thrust of  this program is to develop methods for predicting
the impact of various Air Force activities including the fate of solvents,
waste disposal and accidental spills which may result  in ground water
contamination.  Delineation of the extent and impacts  of dioxia contamina-
tion resulting primarily  from the use, storage, and disposal of agent
orange  is also a major  thrust.  Procedures for the restoration of ground
water duality are also  being investigated.  Topics under investigation
include sorption and degradation of trtchloroethylene  (TCE), other  chlori-
nated compounds, and aromatic hydrocarbons in subsurface environments,
assessment of heavy metal mobility at several Air Force bases, incinera-
tion of dioxin-contaminated soils, feasibility of applied  genetic   engi-
neering techniques  to  achieve dioxiti biodegradation, and evaluation of
methods to enhance  in  situ biodegradation of TCE  and other organic  com-
pounds  in contaminated soils and ground  water.

US Army

     The  objective  of  this  program is  to develop  cost-effective  pollution
 control monitoring  systems,  provide  environmental and  health effects data
 on Army-unique  pollutants,  and  promote efficient  management of environ-
mental  quality  programs through the  development  of management systems and
 information data bases.  Areas  receiving emphasis include: (i) treatment
 methods for  ground  water and soil contamination;  
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                                   C-5
Electric Power Research Institute

     Tie Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) initiated the Solid
Waste Environmental Studies (SWES) program in order to assist in the de-
velopment of data and methods for predicting the fate of constituents in
solid waste at utility disposal sites. The ultimate goal of the SWES
project is to improve (develop) and validate geohydrochemical nodels for
predicting the release, transport, transformation and environmental fate
of chemicals associated with utility solid waste.  The goals of the SWES
project are divided into near-term and long-tern objectives.

American Petroleum Institute

     Research related to ground water  largely concerns cleanup of  immi-
scible  liquids in the subsurface.  .
      In addition to the above programs there are numerous research pro-'
 grams underway in state and private universities.   These programs are
 funded by Federal, state and private agencies or companies,  and frequently
 work cooperatively with the above, agencies as well as indep &nd€*tlj.
 -In general, the quality  of this research is excellent and  is addressing
 major issues surrounding the potential for ground water contamination
 and the cleanup of ground water.  The area which *>« not app ear to be
 receiving appropriate attention is the transfer of this technology into
 the user community whether that be state or private.

      A summary of the research areas or topics being studied in federal
 agencies is provided in the following table:


                   FIDE1AL ACENCf GROUND-WATER RESEARCH PROGRAMS
                                  EESIARCE AREAS

                                SOUECE     PREDICTION      MONITORING      CLEANUP
                                CONTROL

 US  Department  of  Agriculture     X           X

                                  Y                                           X
 US  Army                          *•
                                  Y           Y                 X             X
 US  Air Force                     x           A

 US  Department of Energy          X            X

                                                Y                X
 US  Geological Survey                          A

 US  Environmental Protection
                                   Y            X                A             "•
    Agency                         A
                                                mm                *U"
 Tennessee Valley Authority       X            X                A

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                                                                APPENDIX D
                                 REFERENCES

1,  Carlson,  Carmen,  American Petroleum Institute, Information on API Ground
    Water lesearch, Letter  dated May  15,  1985, Washington, B.C.

2.  Malest Rene, Electric Power Research Institute, Summary of Ground Water
    Studies,  Letter dated February  20,  1985,  Palo Alto, California.

3.  Pye, Veronica, Patrick, R. and  Quarles, J.,  "Ground Water Contamination
    in the Onited States,"  University of Pennsylvania Press,  1983.

4.  U, S. Congress, Office  of Technology Assessment,  "Protecting the Nation's
    Groundwater from  Contamination,"   QTA-Q-233, Washington,  B.C., October,
    1984.

5.  U. S. Environmental Protection Agency,  "Utilization  of EPA Technology  for
    the Stevenson-Wydler Technology Innovation Act of 1980,"  (biennial  Report
    to the Department of Commerce,  covering the period October 1,  1982  to
    September 30, 1984),

6.  U. S. Environmental Protection Agency,  "Ground Water Protection  Strategy,'
    Office of Ground Water Protection, Washington, B.C.,  August,  1984.

7.  van der Heijde,  Paul, Bachmat, Y., Bredehoeft, J», Andrews, I.,  Holtz,
    D. and Sebastian, S.§ "Groundwater Management;  the Use  of Numerical
    Models," American Geophysical Union, Washington,  D.C.,  1985.

8.  Whitehurst, Charles, "State Research Needs," Internal EPA Memorandum,
    Office of Ground Water Protection, Washington,  D.C., February 20,  1985.

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