A Week of ISI Outreach: Capital Hill Briefing, Virginia AWWA, CFD Breakfast

Anthony Kane with ASCE Executive Director Thomas Smith, Jennifer Goupil, Chief Resilience Officer, ASCE, and  Carol Haddock, Director, Houston Public Works following a congressional briefing on Sept. 12.

Sept. 11 – 15 marked a busy week of outreach for ISI. President & CEO Anthony Kane took part in a Capitol Hill Briefing for congressional staff on Sept. 12, joined by speakers from ASCE and the City of Houston. He had the opportunity to provide a short presentation on the Envision framework at this briefing. ASCE Executive Director Thomas Smith, Jennifer Goupil, Chief Resilience Officer, ASCE, and Carol Haddock, Director, Houston Public Works also presented.

On Sept. 11, Anthony was in Virginia Beach, Va. for the WaterJAM 2023 Event. This is the Joint Annual Meeting of the Virginia Water Environment Association and the Virginia Section of the American Waterworks Association, and there is a special “Envision for Water/Wastewater Projects Workshop” on the agenda this year. Anthony joined in a discussion with seasoned professionals in the water sector, from Prince William County Service Authority, HRSD, Ulliman Schutte Construction, Arcadis, Arlington County Government, and Hazen and Sawyer. https://www.vaawwa.org/events/waterjam2023

On Sept. 13, Anthony attended the Committee For Dulles’s 2023 Sustainable Infrastructure Breakfast in Herndon, Virginia. A panel of technical experts, industry influencers, stakeholders, and community leaders will examine opportunities and challenges ahead in sustainability and resilience: Robert W. Lazaro, Jonathan Matheny, Emily Feenstra, Matt Reiffer, Anthony Kane, and J. Michael Sawyers (moderator). https://www.committeefordulles.org/events/sustainable-infrastructure-2023

Bear Creek Solar Project Obtains Envision Platinum

A 50-megawatt (MW) solar project in Richland County, Wisconsin, Bear Creek Solar will produce enough clean, low-cost energy to power approximately 13,000 homes. It is the second Alliant Energy project announced this year to receive an award, with the Wood County Solar Project earning Envision Platinum award in April.

The Bear Creek Solar Project is one of Alliant Energy’s 12 utility-scale solar projects in Wisconsin. In all, the company expects to add nearly 1,100 MW of solar generation in the state by mid-2024. It’s part of the company’s transition to a more diversified energy mix that includes adding more clean energy generation, as outlined in its Clean Energy Blueprint.

Soundbites:

“This Envision Platinum recognition from ISI supports our decision to transition to cleaner energy through projects like the Bear Creek Solar Project,” said Barbara Tormaschy, senior vice president of sustainability and regulatory strategy at Alliant Energy. “The sustainable development and construction of renewable projects allows us to create a healthier environment while providing the reliable energy our customers expect.

Read the full announcement here.

Fairview Cove MCEF project in the Port of Halifax is awarded Envision Verified

The container ship ONE Magnificence at PSA Halifax Fairview Cove. Photo credit Steve Farmer.

Earning high levels of achievement across several Envision sustainability credit areas, this project will improve efficiency, safety and operations of the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) at the Port of Halifax.

The Halifax Port Authority (HPA) had long identified the need to decrease port congestion and plan for future increases in container processing demand. But the Fairview Cove Marine Container Examination Facility (MCEF) project will go much further, delivering speedier turnaround times, enhanced port security, and significant environmental and community benefits.

SOUNDBITES

“Integrating sustainability into our core business practices is essential for future success,” said Captain Allan Gray, President and CEO, Halifax Port Authority. “The completed Marine Container Examination Facility will improve overall operational efficiency while advancing our sustainability goals. It can serve as a framework for future projects on our path to becoming One Port City.”

“This project is a milestone for the Halifax Port Authority and a reflection of the dedication to sustainability, collaboration and moving beyond “Business as Usual” practices,” said Jill Roth, Project Lead ENV SP.

Kristi Wamstad, ISI Verification Director, said: “ISI congratulates the Halifax Port Authority and the project partners on the success of the Fairview Cove Marine Container Examination Facility project. It optimizes rapid and reliable container inspections and helps to achieve the Port’s net-zero emission goals.”

Read more about the Fairview Cove Marine Container Examination Facility (MCEF) project.

Tampa International Airport Master Plan Phase I Project Awarded Envision Verified

The Tampa International Airport Master Plan Phase I Project, led by Hillsborough County Aviation Authority (HCAA), has earned an Envision Verified award for sustainable infrastructure. This project enhanced community mobility, emphasized mitigation against climate change impacts, and advanced many other sustainability goals across multiple Envision credit areas. Phase I was completed in 2018 after three years of work at Tampa International, which is the 23rd-largest US airport, serving nearly 22 million passengers annually (2023 figures).

QUOTES:

Jeff Siddle, Vice President of Planning & Development:

“This Envision-verified certification for Tampa International Airport’s Master Plan Phase 1 is a tremendous achievement for Tampa International Airport. All of TPA’s leadership is proud of this organization’s planning and development processes and its focus on our sustainability program. TPA is known for its consistently excellent customer experience, but we also want to give our travelers the peace of mind that we are devoted to protecting our surrounding natural resources and maintaining them for the future.”

Eric Caplan, Sustainability and Resilience Program Director:

“Earning this honor for these critical projects was a difficult feat, particularly because we launched our certification efforts after the completion of these projects rather than during the development process per industry standard. This is a testament to how we’re able to effectively display our commitment to sustainability through detailed documentation, and it highlights just how well we organically integrate best practices into our processes.”

Read the full announcement.

ISI’s partner, the Spanish Council of Civil Engineers, announces course on sustainable infrastructure and Envision

We are excited to announce the return of the Curso de Certificación Professional en Infraestructuras Sostenibles for Spanish-speaking members of ISI’s community. Following the first edition of this course that sold out earlier this year, the Fall 2023 offering is now open for registration, providing an opportunity for infrastructure professionals or anyone working in sustainability to earn their ENV SP credential in Spanish!

The Fall course is being offered over four Tuesdays in October (Oct. 3, 10, 17, 24). The Curso de Certificación Professional en Infraestructuras Sostenibles is a joint collaboration between the Colegio de Ingenieros de Caminos Canales y Puertos, or Spanish Council of Civil Engineers, Tecniberia and ISI. 

Link to registration and more information.

ISI Releases Envision and Airports Guide

The Envision & Airports: Insights, Resources, & Opportunities Guide (Envision AIRO Guide) provides additional clarity on how to facilitate and optimize the use of Envision in the context of airports. It was developed as a follow-up to the Envision and Airports Executive Brief to recognize and support the unique and variable context of airports as hosts to robust, critical infrastructure.

The guidance supports Envision application while taking into account the many distinctive challenges and questions that arise within an airport setting. Example strategies based on past applications are also included.

Access the AIRO Guide here.

BioPiattaforma di Sesto San Giovanni Project Awarded Envision Platinum

An innovative waste-to-energy plant in the Milan-area municipality of Sesto San Giovanni is the latest project to be awarded Envision Platinum in Italy, through ISI’s Italian partner ICMQ. With two production lines that combine waste treatment and water purification, the BioPiattaforma plant establishes a more sustainable, environmentally friendly process based on circular economy principles and the goal of regional self-sufficiency in waste management.

Read the project profile.

Building a better world: infrastructure as a force for good

Whether in magazine or podcast format, the Economist produces some of the most influential commentary out there on current affairs and global issues. Recently, ISI’s President & CEO Anthony Kane was featured in the Economist Impact’s “Infrastructure for Good” podcast series, in a discussion that included Rowan Palmer of the UN Environment Program. They were asked by Phillip Cornell, Principal, Economist Impact Series to explore how infrastructure can achieve better socioeconomic impacts and environmental resilience.

Here are some quotes from the podcast, which can be accessed in the button further down.

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“Very often natural infrastructure assets are providing protective services, things like slope stabilization or flood protection for example, to built assets; so any climate risk to these natural assets can have knock-on effects of increasing risks to the built assets that benefit from the protective services. This means that it’s really important when trying to understand climate risk to look at these two things together and understand the relationship.”
— Rowan Palmer, on the crucial importance of nature-based infrastructure assets.

“[To respond to the need for resilience,] the ideal is to have a community-wide integrated resilience plan, but projects are delivered at the project level. So you have to have a two-way communication and coordination there that can be very complex. The individual projects have to be resilient, but in the case of infrastructure, they’re always connected to a larger system and the system has to be resilient. That system in turn exists to serve the community and so the community has to be resilient.”
— Anthony Kane highlights interlinkages at the project environment and system level adding complexity to infrastructure development.

“Right now, we’re getting a kind of a piecemeal approach where sometimes the system is resilient; sometimes the project is resilient. But we know in failure situations, all it takes is one weak link and the system is down, and then the community is in a position where they’re potentially at risk. That’s where the challenge is right now, within our existing governance, funding, planning systems: how do we take these both comprehensive views and project-by-project views in embedding resilience.”
— Kane, on one of the key constraints of the current infrastructure development environment.

“It’s really important to ensure the benefits of services [from civil infrastructure] are delivered fairly so that the different parts of a society or community have access to the services they need. A big issue is the issue of gender, and in many cases, men and women use infrastructure services differently, and so it’s important to ensure that infrastructure systems are designed and operated with these differences in mind. A good example is transportation infrastructure. In so many places, men and women have different patterns of mobility often related to the types of work they do, or their livelihoods…”
— Cornell, explaining sustainability from a social resilience perspective.

“There is an environmental dimension to social sustainability…related to the right to a healthy environment and the fact that some communities, and particularly indigenous communities, are more reliant on a natural infrastructure and nature to deliver critical services and livelihoods than other communities might be.”
— Cornell on the components that make an infrastructure asset “good for the community.”

“It starts with having very strong and robust stakeholder engagement. Are we communicating, not in terms of the technical solutions that are being provided, but in the value that the community that is being served is receiving? And do they understand that; do they understand the trade-offs; do we on the design side understand the make-up, the needs, the values, the goals, of the community — the culture of the community — and are we incorporating that into designs? Because the greatest technical solution is not going to reach his potential if the community doesn’t want, or does not use, the infrastructure in the way it was intended.”
— Kane, on the importance of stakeholder engagement.

“In the future I see a model whereby we are more sophisticated at understanding the value of these multi-benefit projects — sharing the costs and then sharing the benefits. It makes economic sense that way, but our systems are not set up [optimally] right now, so it’s still a bit of a hurdle for individual agencies or owners to realize the benefits that they’re delivering. That pushes them back into a more traditional model of ‘one problem–one solution/cheapest-cost solution’ that’s not delivering the value. I think that taking a broader economic view of the projects, of their impacts, the value that’s being delivered, and finding governance structures and funding structures that facilitate that would make a huge impact.”
— Kane, on what might be on the horizon for the current approach to delivering projects that yield multiple benefits.

Phase II of Broad Channel Infrastructure Project Receives Envision Verified Award from ISI

Streets in Broad Channel Phase I were raised to reduce their vulnerability to climate change and received new storm sewers, curbs, shared sidewalks, signs and crosswalks

(Long Island City, NY – May 23, 2023)  NYC Department of Design and Construction (DDC) Commissioner Thomas Foley announced today that Phase II of an infrastructure project in Broad Channel, Queens, which is raising streets and adding new storm sewers to reduce flooding in an area that is frequently inundated by Jamaica Bay during high tides and storms has been selected to receive an Envision Verified Award for sustainability from ISI.

Phase II of the work will provide upgrades to residents on West 14th Road, West 15th Road, West 16th Road and West 17th Road. Construction includes the installation of new bulkheads at the end of each street to address eave attenuation and flood mitigation; rising each street’s centerline; shared streets; signage and striping that that will enhance safety by providing pedestrians the right of way; and the addition of new storm sewers and replacement of sanitary sewers and water mains.

Read the full project announcement here.

ISI has awarded Envision Platinum to Alliant Energy’s Wood County Solar Project

A project that is part of Alliant Energy’s plan to add nearly 1,100 MW of solar power is the latest infrastructure project to be awarded Envision Platinum, highlighting its contributions to sustainable development and clean and renewable energy.

Located in Saratoga, Wisconsin, the Wood County Solar Project, built by EPC contractor Burns & McDonnell, will produce approximately 300 GWh of electricity annually. Pre-project analysis carried out by Alliant Energy underlined the long-term economic, community, and environmental value of developing new utility-scale solar while retiring its coal-fired facilities in Wisconsin. This project is part of Alliant Energy’s solar program that includes adding nearly 1,100 MW of solar power into Wisconsin’s power grid by the summer of 2024.

Quotes:

“Guided by our purpose to serve our customers and build stronger communities, we are proud to be recognized with the Envision Platinum award for our Wood County Solar Project. We know it’s important to build projects with sustainability in mind because of what it means for our customers. We’re able to create a healthier environment while producing reliable, clean energy for the next 30 years.”
— Barbara Tormaschy, Senior Vice President of Sustainability and Regulatory Strategy at Alliant Energy

“ISI congratulates Alliant Energy and the project partners on achieving Envision Platinum for an outstanding project that advances clean and renewable energy in Wisconsin. The independent, third-party verification process using the Envision Framework determined that this project attained the highest award level possible, with significant accomplishments that will benefit the local community and environmental sustainability for decades to come.”
— Melissa Peneycad, ISI Managing Director

In the full project announcement, learn more about the verified results of this project, which included accomplishments tied to protection of wetlands and habitats, well-planned resource management, beneficial use of timber, and greater infrastructure integration and efficiencies.