September-October 2007

Choices in Dust Control

Stabilizing seaports, airports, and dusty roads

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By Mary Ellen Hare

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Military Applications
The military is a major consumer of dust palliatives. As a Marine Corps instructor for arming and refueling operations in Yuma, AZ, Jay Peralta trains teams of soldiers from all of the US military branches and even some foreign nationals in such areas as control of improvised explosive devices, security and convoy operations, and even dust control.

Peralta’s concern, however, is not compliance with the EPA but rather the direct saving of lives as aircraft land on dusty soil. The obvious site for application is a desert in the Middle East, but Peralta’s trainees learn how to keep dust down on similar sites in eastern California and western Arizona. “Those places are not a little dusty,” says Peralta. “Those places are nightmares.”

In training, Peralta teaches dust suppression as part of his course. “We teach them to use the product [in this case, Envirotac] and to conduct operations as if they were part of a team dropped into an undisclosed location and forced to prepare a site for incoming aircraft.”

Envirotac, manufactured by Environmental Products & Applications Inc., is an acrylic co-polymer, which, when it hardens, provides long-lasting dust suppressant, according to Peralta. “We’ve gone in some places close to eight months or a year, and in most longer than a year.”

Peralta says the end user, in this case the military, finds the product easy to apply. “It is mixed with water, and when the water evaporates, it takes the soil particles and forms a thick crust, up to a half-inch, that will keep sand from rising under the rotor-wash of an aircraft.”

Peralta stressed the importance of a dust palliative where aircraft are involved. “We are dealing with multi-million-dollar aircraft and the lives of Marines.”

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Why Envirotac? “We trust the product; we’ve been using it about eight years. It is the most cost-efficient and the cheapest we could find; the others [cost more] and perform just the same.”

To anyone investigating this highly competitive market, it is obvious that enterprise is alive and well in the dust control industry. As long as the dust rises, companies will rise and fight for the right to suppress it.

Author's Bio: Mary Ellen Hare is a writer in Granville, OH.

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