Our Land: New Mexico’s Environmental Past, Present and Future
Cannon Air Force Base: PFAS Update (Full Interview)
Season 4 Episode 16 | 13m 29sVideo has Closed Captions
An update on PFAS contamination at Cannon Air Force Base
In June, the U.S. Air Force announced a $16.6 million contract to build a pilot water treatment plant at the southeastern corner of Cannon Air Force Base, to test three different options for removing PFAS from the groundwater. If all goes according to plan, the "pump and treat" plant will begin operations in 2023.
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Our Land: New Mexico’s Environmental Past, Present and Future is a local public television program presented by NMPBS
Our Land: New Mexico’s Environmental Past, Present and Future
Cannon Air Force Base: PFAS Update (Full Interview)
Season 4 Episode 16 | 13m 29sVideo has Closed Captions
In June, the U.S. Air Force announced a $16.6 million contract to build a pilot water treatment plant at the southeastern corner of Cannon Air Force Base, to test three different options for removing PFAS from the groundwater. If all goes according to plan, the "pump and treat" plant will begin operations in 2023.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipwelcome Chris Gierke.
Thanks for joining me on New Mexico in Focus.
The Air Force announced a 16.6 million dollar contract to AECCOM and Bryce for a pilot project at Cannon Air Force Base.
It'll be a water treatment system installed at the southeastern portion of the base to treat PFOA and PFOS.
It'll test three different pump and treat methods what are you trying to learn from this project?
>>Well, so, to step back a little bit.
This project is more than just a pilot study, so in the comprehensive environmental response compensation and liability acts of CERCLA, before you're able to do any interim actions we must perform what is called an in Engineering Evaluation Cost Analysis so that takes a look at all the different treatment options and data that's available to us and then provides us different options on executing an interim corrective measure and so that's what this project is is we have an eca is the engineering evaluation cost analysis you'll hear it commonly referred to as an eca with a pilot study so with that pilot study it's going to feed data in there to give us more information to finalize a full interim corrective measure that can be implemented here while we're going through our remedial investigation so with that with our knowledge of our groundwater flow the aquifer and the information that we had pulled from the site investigation through rpfos before we looked that the best location for this pilot study would be at the southeast corner because that is typically where the groundwater closed out of and that's also where we saw our highest ppos pifoa impacts and so with that this pilot study with the our extraction wells the data that it's going to help provide us is one it's going to show us capture zones so how close how far apart do these extraction wells need to be put also in this process they're going to be pulling samples so they'll do a treatability study so they're going to look at either granulated active carbon ion exchange or combination of the two to determine what is the best method for treating phosphifoa so there'll be that study portion of it and then once that is completed then they'll go into the design and the actual construction of the pilot study that'll get put in and then throughout the operation of the pilot study that data the samples will be taken and it will help inform that eco at the conclusion of this process then we'll take the information from the eca and if it does inform us that a full-scale pump-and-treat system will be the most viable option for treating the the aquifer here at cannon air force base then this system the pilot study that we created is done in a way where it's flexible and made to be expanded upon so then we can go back and actually expand this system quite easily to go to a full-scale pump and treat system on the base so what kind of a timeline are we looking at just for this pilot project when the system will be built and when when water will start being pumped thank you for that uh so actually this is going to be a very fast project we've already had on the second so we were awarded the contract on or we awarded the contract on may 27th and we had our first site visit from the contractor on june 2nd followed up shortly with june 8th we had our actual kickoff meeting with the contractors here at the base to perform additional site visits and planning so with that they will actually be out on the base on the 14th to start pulling the samples to do that treatability study so we're going to roll right into that treatability study in the design phase very quickly with tentative plans for you know construction to start around early next year and with that it'll be about and and these are tentative right now but about a one year construction time frame and then that will be when the operation will begin and we'll start collecting the actual samples and data from that and so yes the the pumping and treating portion of that will commence then so looking at early 2023 for the actual operation to start okay so the air force press release says it can pump 600 gallons a minute to remove pfos and pfoa what happens to that water once it's been treated for those two specific types of pur and polyfluoroalkyl substances and then what happens to the pfas and the pifoa that's taken out of the water so right now the treated water will be re-injected back into the aquifer so we'll take it out treat it and then replenish it back into the aquifer right now as far as the disposal of uh used filtration equipment that will depend on where we're at in the regulatory process down the road because things are changing so as new guidelines come out that will affect how we handle that waste that's generated at that time so whatever the current regulations are is what the air force will strictly follow so if you find out that this pump and tree system works or one of these particular systems works better than others is this something that you can tie into the larger water system tie into the city of clovis's water system kind of what's the future look like here uh with this i mean we're right now just looking at the the current pilot study with the eco so we can get an interim action and with this interim action it's looking at the for the most part it's to mitigate any further off-base migration of people so those further interactions with potential of clovis and stuff i can't say for sure but we are partnering in with our local community doing our public meetings so we open all public groups to come out there and bring comments and concerns and questions and participate in that manner so you and i have talked in the past about a remedial investigation contract that was awarded i think last summer in august 2020. can you give me an update on where that is if that work has started yet and what that remedial investigation is and how it ties into this pilot project absolutely uh so with the remedial investigation the last time we talked was we're going through the process of developing that work plan and that'll have to go out for a 30-day regulatory review we'll get that back and we'll incorporate those comments into it and then we can finalize that and actually go commence field work right now the the field work was slated to start in october of this year uh right now we are actually working to get that regulatory 30-day comment period going now so we're a little ahead of the curve so it just depends on how many comments we get and what it takes to incorporate those into the work plan and then finalize it because once we get that finalized we can actually start work as soon as possible um we've been closely working with our contractor to make sure that once we have that finalized we can start work as soon as possible and the first stage that we're planning will be collecting off-base ground water samples and soil samples from the local outside area to help start delineating that pfos people impact off base so there's a long lead time between the awarding of that contract and the development of a work plan and the implementation of the field work the pilot project contract seemed to come together a lot more quickly can you talk about why that is and how how that sort of thing happens so it's it's a different process with the ri it was going through our normal mechanisms for acquisition and with the work plan it is a lot more in-depth and as we go through this other one with the eco and pilot study there will be a work plan but they're doing they have have some upfront work that's already done for the sampling portions of their work plan so they can do their bench scale testing and studying and analysis so as that's going they'll be developing their work plan in tandem whereas with the remedial investigation there's no work that could be done up front this work plan needs to be fully developed and finalized embedded so we are pushing that as quickly as possible and as i said hopefully we're shooting to be out ahead of schedule so that that is our goal to keep pushing as quickly as possible and with your other question that you asked is how will these two interact as they get out into the field and start collecting data from the remedial investigation all of that data will be sent over to the eco contractors and that will actually go into formally you know fully developing those potential interim actions okay so the air force and aecom have done these sort of pilot projects elsewhere like wright-patterson air force base what have you already learned about the process of pumping and treating these two pfos and pfoa and why do these different methods need to keep being tested in different pilot projects for us here at cannon air force base this pilot study is important because each area that you go to has different chemistry in their water so as some are familiar in closed mexico and the surrounding areas we do have very hard water and so that has to be taken in consideration in your design and how you build it because when we do a full scale system on this we want to make sure that we build something that is going to last and we don't want to have to go in there and keep replacing it and we don't want to potentially have what is called breakthrough so you want to build the system in a way that it has long-term effective usefulness on it and so that's where these pilot studies come in handy to be able to come in here and with this not only will it also feed information to give us a a better eca but we'll have the basic infrastructure there so at the end of this and eco when it's done we'll be able to go to a full-scale setup in most of the infrastructures there already a lot of times when it comes to an interim action you may only do anika so that eco process may take a year or two and then you get to start the process of putting that interim corrective measure in place with this we're ahead of the curve by having the pilot study in there and if it does show us that that full scale is the best option we've got that infrastructure there we can expand on it and continue operation as it is but expand it to the full scale operations so what would you like people living on the base and near the base to understand about this project and clean up efforts going forward well i think the biggest thing that i would like them to understand is and in our last public meeting we've said it that we do listen we would like you all to become you know come to our public meetings participate we are listening we hear your concerns we understand that everybody's concerned is clean water in and around the areas they want us to take action and this is what we're doing we've pushed hard and strive to push this investigation forward as rapidly as possible and have looked for different methods that we can implement to meet the community's needs and concerns and with this eco project and pilot project we believe that that's really meeting the need and that first step towards a full-scale interim corrective measure and you have a public meeting coming up soon can you tell our audience about that yes that'll be june 14th it'll be via zoom and it will be 5 o'clock p.m mountain standard time till 6 30 and we have put out a press release on that and then on our pa website under the environmental tab contains the information to attend that and everyone is welcome to join and attend and then if you are not able to attend that we do record these sessions and make it available at the same location all right chris thank you so much for joining me on new mexico infocus i look forward to continuing the conversation thank you thank you for having me
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Our Land: New Mexico’s Environmental Past, Present and Future is a local public television program presented by NMPBS