Data to create the List of Contaminated or Potentially Contaminated Sites - Remediation Division is from historical program information or from new program applications and filings. More information regarding the generation of this list can be found at: https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/Remediation--Site-Clean-Up/List-of-Contaminated-or-Potentially-Contaminated-Sites-in-Connecticut A seperate dataset is published for: List of Contaminated Sites or Potentially Contaminated - SASU Case Management System and provide a list of Leaking Underground Storage Tank Sites. The two database systems are maintained by different Divisions within the agency. There may be sites in both databases due to an overlap in responsibilities of the two Divisions. https://data.ct.gov/Environment-and-Natural-Resources/List-of-Contaminated-or-Potentially-Contaminated-S/77ya-7twa The data is updated when documents are received for responsible parties conducting site remediation. For more information regarding the individual remedial programs visit: https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/Remediation--Site-Clean-Up/Remediation-Site-Clean-Up Those seeking additional information about information contained in this dataset may use the DEEP FOIA Process: https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/About/FOIA-Requests Each Row represents a Remediation project (Property Transfer, Brownfield, Enforcement, Federal Remediation, State Remediation, Landfill Monitoring, RCRA Corrective Action, and Voluntary). Data to compile the list was gathered for each site from information provided to DEEP for requirements within each program. Sites may be in multiple Remediation programs and therefore may be listed more than once. Some sites have been fully cleaned up while others have limited information about the environmental conditions. The list includes only sites that been reported to DEEP or EPA. Additional information for site within the Hazard Notification program can be found at: https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/Remediation--Site-Clean-Up/Significant-Environmental-Hazard-Program/List-of-Significant-Environmental-Hazards Significant Environmental Hazard Sites GIS Map: https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/9c100aa21fbe4ee180df9942d000f676 Details on columns which reference ELUR: Environmental Land Use Restriction (ELUR) or Notice and Use Limitation (NAUL) are used to minimize the risk of human exposure to pollutants and hazards to the environment by preventing specific uses or activities at a property or a portion of a property. Link to GIS map of ELUR and restriction type: https://ctdeep.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=d37eccb2a5c3491d8f0d389a96d9a912 There may be errors in the data although we strive to minimize them. Examples of errors may include: misspelled or incomplete addresses and/or missing data.
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A point feature class of open DERM Contaminated sites within Miami-Dade County. See phase code for the status of the site. Contaminated Sites, identifies properties where environmental contamination has been documented in the soil or groundwater. Facilities get listed as a contaminated site by a DERM inspector who finds a violation on the property. Facilities that store potentially contaminated materials are permitted and/or tracked by DERM. A site is removed from the active contaminated sites layer/list when the site is found by DERM to be cleaned up.Updated: Weekly The data was created using: Projected Coordinate System: WGS_1984_Web_Mercator_Auxiliary_SphereProjection: Mercator_Auxiliary_Sphere
This web application allows the public to search and find information about contaminated sites caused by a release of hazardous materials or hazardous waste products and print out results.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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The Federal Contaminated Sites Inventory includes information on all known federal contaminated sites under the custodianship of departments, agencies and consolidated Crown corporations as well as those that are being or have been investigated to determine whether they have contamination arising from past use that could pose a risk to human health or the environment. The inventory also includes non-federal contaminated sites for which the Government of Canada has accepted some or all financial responsibility. It does not include sites where contamination has been caused by, and which are under the control of, enterprise Crown corporations, private individuals, firms or other levels of government.
https://www.data.gov.uk/dataset/e3c34d3b-d02e-43b7-b7a1-e495e9ddb562/contaminated-land-part-iia-public-register#licence-infohttps://www.data.gov.uk/dataset/e3c34d3b-d02e-43b7-b7a1-e495e9ddb562/contaminated-land-part-iia-public-register#licence-info
A dataset of polygons with an attribute table that summariss the location and status of land recorded within the public register kept under the part IIA contaminated land provisions of the Environmental Protection Act 1990.
The public registers content are proscribed in regulations but principally describe land where certain formal Part IIA actions have taken place OR where a statement regarding voluntary remediation has been filed.
Special sites where regualtory enforcement has been transferred to the Environment Agency are indicated.
Note: This dataset is updated daily. The Known Contaminated Sites List for New Jersey (KCSLNJ) are those sites and properties within the state where contamination of soil or ground water has been confirmed at levels equal to or greater than applicable standards. This list of Known Contaminated Sites may include sites where remediation is either currently under way, required but not yet initiated or has been completed and addressed via an Institutional Control. The KCSLNJ layer has now been modified such that the information portrayed in the GIS layer is updated daily through a SQL query of NJEMS/Masterfile, which allows for a dynamic KCSLNJ layer. This is critical for the general public and SRP regulated community by allowing them to see the most up to date information for a known contaminated site in a GIS format via the following web mapping applications: NJ Geoweb (https://www.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=02251e521d97454aabadfd8cf168e44d) or the SRP Profile in ArcGIS Online (AGO) (https://njdep.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=25d1cd0ae75048b1a7867971392b6995).
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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Land is legally defined as 'contaminated' where substances are causing or could cause significant harm to people, property or protected species as well as causing significant pollution to surface waters (for example lakes and rivers) or groundwater. Land can become contaminated by a variety of substances, from heavy metals to agricultural waste. The environmental, financial and legal implications of this can be substantial. The management and remediation of contaminated land that, in its current state, is causing or has the potential to cause significant harm or significant pollution of the water environment, is regulated by legislation and underpinned by the core principles of the 'polluter pays' and a 'suitable for use approach'. Local authorities are the primary regulator for the contaminated land regime (SEPA also has certain responsibilities within the scope of the legislation) to regulate activities and assist in the management and remediation of contaminated land. Contaminated Land can go through remediation work and this dataset attempts to collect that detail. However, when a site has been remediated, it becomes suitable for the current use (at the time of remediation), and that this doesn't mean the site is 'clean' or has no contamination. Further assessment/remediation may be required should there be any change of use or new planning application etc. The current regulation regarding Contaminated Land is contained within the Environmental Protection Act (1990) known as Part IIA. Part IIA is further established in Scotland by the Contaminated Land (Scotland) Regulations 2000 (SSI 2000/178), as amended and the Scottish Government's Statutory Guidance: Edition 2 provides the detailed framework for the definition, identification and remediation of contaminated land. THIS SPATIAL DATASET IS ONLY CONFIRMED (AND REMEDIATED) CONTAMINATED LAND AND DOES NOT INCLUDE 'POTENTIALLY' CONTAMINATED LAND.
Sites contaminated by hazardous materials or wastes. These sites are those administered by the Contaminated Sites Section of Iowa DNR. Many are sites which are assessed for contamination when property is sold; and others may actually have contamination and may or may not have been remediated. For example, it includes sites for Brownfields, CERCLA Preremedial and Remedial, Chapter 133, and the Land Recycling Program. It does not include RCRA sites which are administered by EPA, or Leaking Underground Storage Tank (LUST) sites (with petroleum contamination) which are administered by the Iowa DNR LUST Section.
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In table 1, represents the number of interacting protein pairs that are reversed, and represents the number of non-interacting protein pairs that are reversed. We set the status for 1250 out of 5000 protein pairs as interacting, and 3750 out of 5000 protein pairs as non-interacting.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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The data shows the list of contaminated environmental matrices and the family of contaminants found, to be associated with the sites present in the Register of contaminated sites of the Piedmont Region. The dataset to be associated is "Register of contaminated sites", which represents a subset of the sites recorded in the register, limited to those for which information on the contamination matrix is available. For linking information the key field is SITE_ID. Each site may have multiple contaminated matrices.
The North-western region of Piedmont and the island of Sardinia accounted for the largest surface covered by contaminated soil in Italy as of 2021. The most extensive contaminated site in the country, Casal Monferrato, is located in Piedmont.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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Land is legally defined as 'contaminated' where substances are causing or could cause significant harm to people, property or protected species as well as causing significant pollution to surface waters (for example lakes and rivers) or groundwater. Land can become contaminated by a variety of substances, from heavy metals to agricultural waste. The environmental, financial and legal implications of this can be substantial. The management and remediation of contaminated land that, in its current state, is causing or has the potential to cause significant harm or significant pollution of the water environment, is regulated by legislation and underpinned by the core principles of the 'polluter pays' and a 'suitable for use approach'. Local authorities are the primary regulator for the contaminated land regime (SEPA also has certain responsibilities within the scope of the legislation) to regulate activities and assist in the management and remediation of contaminated land. Contaminated Land can go through remediation work and this dataset attempts to collect that detail. However, when a site has been remediated, it becomes suitable for the current use (at the time of remediation), and that this doesn't mean the site is 'clean' or has no contamination. Further assessment/remediation may be required should there be any change of use or new planning application etc. The current regulation regarding Contaminated Land is contained within the Environmental Protection Act (1990) known as Part IIA. Part IIA is further established in Scotland by the Contaminated Land (Scotland) Regulations 2000 (SSI 2000/178), as amended and the Scottish Government’s Statutory Guidance: Edition 2 provides the detailed framework for the definition, identification and remediation of contaminated land. THIS SPATIAL DATASET IS ONLY CONFIRMED (AND REMEDIATED) CONTAMINATED LAND AND DOES NOT INCLUDE 'POTENTIALLY' CONTAMINATED LAND.
http://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licencehttp://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licence
The data represents the sites that have been officially determined as 'Contaminated Land' in Cornwall, under Part IIA of the Environmental Protection Act 1990. Sites are only determined as Contaminated Land after an extensive site investigation and risk assessment process which provides evidence to show that there is the possibility of significant harm or pollution being caused. Contaminated land is defined legally as land where substances could cause:
significant harm to people or protected species significant pollution of surface waters or groundwater.
This mapping layer does not cover sites which may be potentially contaminated. A contaminated land register is held and maintained as prescribed by part 2A of the Environmental Protection Act 1990. The register is intended to act as a full and permanent record of the regulatory action taken by the enforcement authority in relation to the remediation of contaminated land. In addition to the Contaminated Land Register, there are formal 'Records of Determination' which can be found on Cornwall Councils website
Maintain the number of contaminated land acres cleaned at 100 acres every year through 2017.
The MPCA's What's in My Neighborhood contains a wide variety of environmental information about your community. This includes potentially contaminated sites, permits, licenses, registrations, inspections, and closed enforcement activities.
Potentially contaminated sites: Since the early 1980s when major federal and state cleanup programs were created, the MPCA has been aggressively searching for and helping to clean up contaminated properties, from very small to large. This website contains a searchable inventory of those properties, as well as sites that have already been cleaned up and those currently being investigated or cleaned up.
Environmental permits and registrations: This Web application also contains a searchable inventory of businesses that have applied for and received different types of environmental permits and registrations from the MPCA.
Methods for creating site locations have different levels of precision. The most accurate locations use coordinates from GPS (global positioning system). Coordinates are also derived using the site's street address, zip code or public land survey information. Some MPCA sites are not mapped. These are generally activities that are mobile, like ships with ballast water permits.
Under the Environmental Protection Act 1990, Local Authorities have a duty to keep a Contaminated Land Register. This contains the details of land that has been remediated under this legislation. The map layer contains the sites that are on this register
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Response of pelagic communities to an input of contaminated elutriate from sediments or to artificial pollution with a mix of pollutants
All of these recorded contaminated sites included here are before and after remediation has been performed. These sites have been analyzed for contaminates and are analyzed against established criteria. Sites that are not currently active are not displayed.
Contaminated Sites are based on two types:
Reference:
Florida Administrative Code & Florida Administrative Register Rule Chapters:
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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List of contaminated sites as provided for in section 31.68 of the Environment Quality Act. More information is available on the City Portal. It is also possible to consult the data in the directory of the Ministry of the Environment and the Fight against Climate Change, Wildlife and Parks of Quebec in addition.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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Certain types of contaminated land (as described in Regulation 2 of the Contaminated Land (England) Regulations 2006 are required to be designated as special sites. The effect of this is that the Environment Agency becomes the enforcing authority (rather than the Local Authority) and assumes responsibility for requiring remediation to be carried out under section 78E of Part 2A of the Environmental Protection Act 1990 (Part 2A). This dataset is a list of all sites which have been designated as special sites by Local Authorities under section 78C of Part 2A up to 31 March 2019. Some of these sites are no longer special sites as the designation has been terminated. Details include site name, address, date of designation, special site status/category, site area, number of designations and date of any terminations.
Data to create the List of Contaminated or Potentially Contaminated Sites - Remediation Division is from historical program information or from new program applications and filings. More information regarding the generation of this list can be found at: https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/Remediation--Site-Clean-Up/List-of-Contaminated-or-Potentially-Contaminated-Sites-in-Connecticut A seperate dataset is published for: List of Contaminated Sites or Potentially Contaminated - SASU Case Management System and provide a list of Leaking Underground Storage Tank Sites. The two database systems are maintained by different Divisions within the agency. There may be sites in both databases due to an overlap in responsibilities of the two Divisions. https://data.ct.gov/Environment-and-Natural-Resources/List-of-Contaminated-or-Potentially-Contaminated-S/77ya-7twa The data is updated when documents are received for responsible parties conducting site remediation. For more information regarding the individual remedial programs visit: https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/Remediation--Site-Clean-Up/Remediation-Site-Clean-Up Those seeking additional information about information contained in this dataset may use the DEEP FOIA Process: https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/About/FOIA-Requests Each Row represents a Remediation project (Property Transfer, Brownfield, Enforcement, Federal Remediation, State Remediation, Landfill Monitoring, RCRA Corrective Action, and Voluntary). Data to compile the list was gathered for each site from information provided to DEEP for requirements within each program. Sites may be in multiple Remediation programs and therefore may be listed more than once. Some sites have been fully cleaned up while others have limited information about the environmental conditions. The list includes only sites that been reported to DEEP or EPA. Additional information for site within the Hazard Notification program can be found at: https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/Remediation--Site-Clean-Up/Significant-Environmental-Hazard-Program/List-of-Significant-Environmental-Hazards Significant Environmental Hazard Sites GIS Map: https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/9c100aa21fbe4ee180df9942d000f676 Details on columns which reference ELUR: Environmental Land Use Restriction (ELUR) or Notice and Use Limitation (NAUL) are used to minimize the risk of human exposure to pollutants and hazards to the environment by preventing specific uses or activities at a property or a portion of a property. Link to GIS map of ELUR and restriction type: https://ctdeep.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=d37eccb2a5c3491d8f0d389a96d9a912 There may be errors in the data although we strive to minimize them. Examples of errors may include: misspelled or incomplete addresses and/or missing data.