Pacific Northwest: Policy
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OREGON In April 2004, Oregon established the Industrial Brownfields Redevelopment Strategy, recognizing that the cleanup and reuse of industrial brownfields has a number of benefits for the state and local communities. This includes efficient use of public infrastructure investment, bringing underutilized or vacant properties back to taxable use, and reduced risks to public health, as well as conservation of dwindling resource lands.
Oregon’s Industrial Brownfield Redevelopment Strategy enhances market acceptance and reuse of existing industrial lands for industrial uses and employment. Land owners, local partners and state agencies seek to identify, certify and market properties for new industrial or traded sector uses. Incomplete knowledge about previously used industrial lands with concerns over actual or perceived contamination (brownfields) can cause these sites to be overlooked in favor of undeveloped land outside of urban growth boundaries.
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Pacific Northwest
By Steve Dwyer
The Pacific Northwest has long been viewed as a pioneering region in adopting sustainable development practices. Back in the early to mid-1990’s, these principles were carried out by fledgling coalitions such as Sustainable Northwest, established in 1994 within a charter
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Meet local market makers who are having a positive impact on the world’s landscape
Gil Wistar Brownfields Coordinator, Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, Portland
As Brownfields Coordinator for the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) in Portland, Wistar keeps abreast
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Industry Profiles
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H. Keith DuBois Brownfields Program Coordinator, New Hampshire Dept. of Environmental Services (NHDES) Concord, New Hampshire |
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Paul Arnold, PE Principal and Brownfields Initiative Leader, TRC Cos. Lowell, Mass. |
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Count On It
 28 percent approximate amount of all energy used in the Unites States for transporting people and goods from one place to another.
Source U.S. Department of Energy
 200-300 estimated number of hydrogen-fueled vehicles in the United States today
Source U.S. Department of Energy
 9,783,000 number of barrels of crude oil the United States imports each day.
Source U.S. Department of Energy
 1 million number of gallons of fresh water that can be contaminated from the used oil from one oil change.
Source U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
 20 million number of people that celebrated the first Earth Day on Aril 22, 1970.
Source U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
 $2.3 billion amount President Obama awarded for clean energy manufacturing projects across the United States
Source U.S. Department of Energy
 509 approximate number of operational landfill gas (LFG) energy projects currently in the United States. LFG electricity generation projects provide the energy equivalent of powering more than 920,000 homes annually
Source U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
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