PES-31 Soil and Groundwater Remediation Case History – St. Louis County, Missouri

Case History
PES-31
Soil and Groundwater RemediationIn-Situ Soil Bioremediation

Document Overview

This case history describes a soil and groundwater remediation design in St. Louis County, Missouri where PES-31 biotreatment products were incorporated into a broader remedial system for waste oil tank related contamination.

Reported Remediation Results

MetricBefore / InitialAfter / FinalReported ChangeNotes
Installation cost savingsConventional later installation would have increased costAt least $15,000 in savings reportedCost savings from installing system components during UST closureReported in source document
Groundwater monitoring wellsGroundwater contamination required assessmentFour monitoring wells installedMonitoring network establishedSource document states four monitoring wells were installed
Treatment wellsLimited excavation possibleTwo treatment wells installed in waste oil tank excavation backfillPES-31 delivery points incorporated into remedial systemSource document also describes treatment beneath the building
Groundwater recovery pumpsContaminated groundwater present on siteThree existing monitoring wells fitted with groundwater recovery pumpsGroundwater directed to an air stripperPart of the three-tiered remedial design

Project and Application Details

Case History Format
Single Project
Location / Context
St. Louis County, Missouri
Project Type
Soil and groundwater remediation
Media or Surface
Contaminated soil and groundwater
Contaminant Type
Waste oil tank related petroleum contamination
Treatment Scale
Treatment wells, monitoring wells, groundwater recovery pumps, air stripper, and vapor recovery system
Treatment Period
System operational since February 1992 according to the source document

PES Application Summary

PES-31 biotreatment products were applied through existing treatment wells in the waste oil tank pit area and beneath the building. The remedial design also used groundwater recovery pumps, an air stripper, and a vacuum extraction system connected to previously installed piping.

Reported Outcome

The source document reports that the Missouri Department of Natural Resources approved the remedial design and that the system had been operational since February 1992.

Key Takeaways

This case history supports PES-31 positioning as part of a broader remediation system involving soil, groundwater, treatment wells, groundwater recovery, air stripping, and vapor extraction. It also highlights the value of installing remedial system components during UST closure work.

Related PES Information

Need help selecting the right PES product?

Contact PES to discuss the affected media, petroleum type, cleanup environment, application method, and product fit for your project.

Contact PES