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COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF JUNE 23,2000 PSA#2628Cdr, AMC Acquisition Center, Edgewood Branch, Attn: AMSSB-ACC-E, 5183
Blackhawk Road, Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD 21010-5424 79 -- ALTERNATIVE CLEANER PERFORMANCE EVALUATION PROGRAM SOL
00-AEC-0001 DUE 071900 POC Wayne Ziegler, U.S. Army Aberdeen Test
Center (ATC), Attn:AMSRL-WM-MD, B4600, Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD
21010-5059, (410)306-0746 or e-mail: wziegler@arl.mil E-MAIL: click
here to contact the Government Technical Representative,
wziegler@arl.mil. This notice is a repost of Submission No. 455862,
dated 17 May 2000. It is being reissued in order to extend the response
date to 17 July 00. This announcement seeks participation from private
industry in the Alternative Cleaner Performance Validation Program.
The U.S. Army Environmental Center (USAEC) and the U.S. Army Aberdeen
Test Center (ATC) have established the program to facilitate validation
and approval of alternative cleaners proposed as substitutes for
hazardous solvents currently used in U.S. Army maintenance and repair
operations. Success in the program to date includes the establishment
of a test protocol developed in cooperation with and endorsed by major
commodity commands responsible for approving solvent substitute use on
Army materiel items. Background Many federal, state and local laws and
regulations limit the use, storage and disposal of hydrocarbon-based
cleaning solvents due to their classification as hazardous, toxic, and
flammable substances. Unfortunately, the Army and other defense
agencies rely on these solvents to maintain unique, mission-critical
systems and materiel. Alternative cleaners have the potential to reduce
solvent use and provide significant economic benefits. An inherent
problem in selecting and using alternative cleaners however is that
selection mistakes are often made because many products marketed have
a GSA contract number or are listed in DLA catalogs as "environmentally
friendlier." Regrettably, although an alternative cleaner may have an
environmentally friendlier designation it does not mean that the
products' performance has been verified or that it is authorized for
military use. In many instances assumptions based on these designations
have led purchasing organizations to procure alternative cleaners
without realizing the potential impact to soldiers that use them, the
materiel items they are used on and ultimately, readiness. Another
problem is that many purchasing organizations are unaware of the
approval process or that validation is needed beforemaking any
significant changes to maintenance procedures or cleaning regimens. As
a result the uncontrolled replacement of solvents with environmentally
friendly products has resulted in a number of use, approval, and
material compatibility issues. Problems such as these have driven the
need to better understand performance requirements, establish
validation standards, prevent duplication of effort, and facilitate
expeditious review and approval of alternative cleaner use where
appropriate. Scope: The ultimate objective of the program is to promote
approval, adoption, and routine use of environmentally acceptable
solvent substitutes. Associated goals of the program include
identifying and assessing user needs, fostering active participation
and input from private industry, documenting lessons learned, and
providing defensible data to commodity approval authorities. Defensible
data that meets approval authority reporting requirements is the key
factor that will be used to foster approval, usage and procurement
decisions. The effort promoted by this announcement shall utilize
resources, expertise and funding from both the private and public
sectors. Selection Criteria -- The Alternative Cleaner Performance
Validation Program requires that potential technologies submitted for
verification satisfy certain selection criteria. Alternative cleaners
submitted for verification must meet the above focus area, not be
detrimental to the environment as compared to hydrocarbon solvents
currently being used, have obvious economic benefit, and have pollution
prevention qualities that can be tested and presented as valuable
verification factors to the commodity approval authorities. Cleaners to
be tested should also be commercially ready for implementation, meaning
beyond the conceptual stage, and logistically available, maintainable,
supportable and reliable. The concept of commercially ready will be
evaluated on a case-by-case basis and will be dependent on availability
for the target user and volume of delivery required bythe user. An
attractive aspect of the program is that a pre-screening regimen has
been developed that will assist private industry participants in
determining if it is economically beneficial to proceed with full-scale
performance verification. Selecting Technologies for Verification --
Each response to this announcement will be reviewed to determine if the
submission meets the above criteria. Candidates for verification
testing will be selected based on several factors, including: ability
to a pass pre-screening, have demonstrated and documented success in
private or private sectors, have a virtually non-existent environmental
impact, low economic risks for implementation, realistic potential to
meet performance requirements, and practicality of implementation.
What's Involved in Verification? This announcement represents the
request for participation. All responses will be reviewed regarding
their merit. Endorsement of the final test protocol by all relevant
commodity approval authorities will be confirmed. Private industry
participants will be allowed to submit data from independent
laboratories that adheres to reporting requirements and validation
methods identified in the program test protocol. The current program
test protocol can be found on the USAEC web page at
http://aec.army.mil. To locate the program protocol on the USEAC web
site go to Technology then Pollution Prevention Technology and then to
Alternative Cleaner Performance Validation. It should be noted that
the protocol performance requirements and test methods may change at
anytime as directed by commodity command approval authorities. However,
if any changes are made to the protocol before, during or after testing
due notice of those changes shall be given. The ATC will conduct
performance verification allowing technology providers to participate
as observers on designated occasions. Performance parameters evaluated
will focus on, constituent evaluation, material compatibility, and
environmental quality benefits reflective of the alternative cleaner.
The result of performance verification testing will be a final report
that shall be prepared by ATC for private industry participant
consumption and the commodity manager approval process. Final reports
provided to private industry participants shall be a sanitized version
containing the industry participant's data and results only. The
version of the final report provided to the commodity commands shall be
used to identify solvent substitutes that meet stringent military
maintenance, cleaning, service and repair performance requirements and
to update or prepare "Qualified Products List (QPLs)." Funding Private
industry participants will be required to contribute funds for
completion of the verification testing. Under the terms of the program,
private industry participants will be required to pay for performance
testing of their specific products while government funds will be used
to qualify manufacturer/ vendor furnished data, perform test set-up,
purchase military unique materials required for testing and conduct
performance validation test. Alternative solvent manufacturers will
realize significant cost savings under this program due to
economies-of-scale and cost sharing. The minimum private industry
contribution for verification will be determined by the amount of funds
available to support testing, the cost to perform the testing per
product, and the number of technology providers participating. What's
Involved in Participation? The technology provider is expected to be
able to contribute time, materials, and funds to the verification.
Specifically, the technology provider should plan to cover the costs
and/or labor for the following: attending a "vendor's briefing" to
obtain site, program, and fee information; sending the equipment to ATC
when required for testing; and assisting with set-up of the equipment
(if necessary) for verification testing. Government verification
testing will be performed pursuant to a Test Support Agreement executed
by ATC with each participating private party. Verification testing will
be done by ATC staff at ATC's facilities unless ATC does not have the
existing capabilities to do so. In this case, another laboratory having
the desired expertise will be used. The ATC is responsible for:
maintaining the validation protocol; evaluating and verifying data;
conducting the verification testing; preparing a draft report for
review and comment by private industry participants and commodity
approval authorities; and disseminating the final report and any other
related information. The verification process is considered complete
when the final report has been provided to commodity approval
authorities and decisions have been made regarding acceptable
alternative cleaner usage. Meetings with potential private industry
participants are scheduled to begin in July of 2000. The meetings will
ensure understanding of program objectives, private industry roles and
the verification testing scope, including: environmental verification
factors, performance and quality verification factors required for
approval user implementation decisions, data valuable to technology
providers to promote products, and data valuable to end users of the
product. For verification testing, the USAEC and ATC will include all
interested private industry participants whose products meet the
defined requirements and who are willing to provide the fee determined
after all responses have been received. Response Format -- A written
informational response, not a proposal, is requested. This request for
information is designed only to determine those technologies that may
be candidates for verification. The USAEC and ATC request that
responses consist of a letter indicating interest in participation,
which includes the following information (where applicable): name(s),
address, phone and fax numbers, and electronic mail of the
vendor/technology provider and information on the technology or
technologies that the provider wants to included in the verification
process. Confidential or proprietary information may be required to be
released for government consumption only as necessary to evaluate
constituents or to determine a cleaners potential impact on the
environment, safety and occupational health. It is recommended that
this type of information be kept to a minimum until required to begin
validation testing. Why Should You Participate? Participation will help
to maximize your marketing resources and will alleviate the need to do
product-specific verifications at the direction of each potential user
or customer thus saving significant time, money and resources. In
addition, a workgroup will be established that will include
representation from user, approval authority, and private industry
stakeholders. Private industry participants will have the opportunity
to provide input to future program direction and protocol development.
The public/private partnership seeks to prevent duplication of effort,
encourages the acceptance of alternative cleaners where appropriate and
helps to identify the most viable markets for technology insertion. The
program has an aggressive strategy for information dissemination.
Results of the verification will be distributed to all applicable users
as deemed appropriate by commodity command approval authorities to
increase awareness of technically and commercially viable alternative
cleaners (this assures the maximum exposure and visibility of the
results of the verification). Although no validated product can be
endorsed by the United States government, the Department of Defense or
its agencies, completing performance verification testing will enhance
the acceptance and use of validated alternative cleaners. This program
promotes pollution prevention by providing a viable mechanism to
facilitate performance validation of solvent substitutes through active
participation from users, private industry and approval authorities.
Posted 06/21/00 (W-SN466952). (0173) Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0307 20000623\79-0001.SOL)
79 - Cleaning Equipment and Supplies Index Page
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