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Enron,
Arthur Andersen and WorldCom to the contrary, numbers don't
lie: the environmental market posted solid gains in 2001.
ENR's Top 200 Environmental Firms reported $32.8 billion in
revenue for the year, a 13% gain over the previous year. For
the first time ever, the annual number topped $30 billion,
despite the twin anchors of recession and a costly war on
terror instigated by the Sept. 11 attacks on the Pentagon
and World Trade Center.
Conventional wisdom says the environmental
market lags the general economy, that a Bush administration
would cast a pall on remediation spending and that the cost
of fighting a war would divert military funds earmarked for
base cleanup. All of these things could come to pass, but
none has happened yet.
Every market sector but one recorded
revenue growth for the year, ranging from 4% expansion of
hazardous waste work to a whopping 37% jump in nuclear cleanup
efforts. The lone laggard was the air sector, which fell by
9%, possibly as a consequence of President Bush's Clear Skies
initiative, which is being interpreted as a relaxation of
the existing Clean Air Act standards.
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HOLD THE FORT So
far, U.S. is spending for war, but not cutting back
on cleanup. (Photo
courtesy of the Dept. of Defense)
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SAFE AT HOME. The war on terror
is creating new market opportunities, as the Office of Homeland
Security and the Environmental Protection Agency order vulnerability
assessments of the national infrastructure. "We recognized
the potential for water security work after 9/11," says John
Somerville, president of Wakefield, Mass.-based Metcalf &
Eddy, an environmental arm of AECOM Technology Corp.
The Los Angeles-based parent company
hiked revenue last year by 45%, but only moved up two positions
on the list, from No. 20 to No. 18. The company moved away
from work in the nuclear sector and bolstered its water efforts,
increasing its share of environmental work by 5%, to 22% overall.
Metcalf & Eddy has passed through a succession of owners
in the last decade. Competitors regarded it as a once-respected
consulting firm that had lost direction. Under AECOM, however,
the firm may be recovering some of its lost luster.
"As we see market opportunities,
we launch initiatives. The water security area is as successful
as any this year," says Somerville. "We have 15 projects under
way. We see requests for proposals every week."
EPA's grants for large water system
vulnerability assessments are only $115,000 apiece, barely
a drop in the settling tank. "We'd all really rather be doing
pilot plants for UV (ultraviolet) disinfection with our big
systems," says Richard Moore, a vice president in the Tampa
office of water-wastewater consultant Camp Dresser & McKee
Inc. On the other hand, the vulnerability assessment work
gives consultants a chance to cement re- lationships with
municipal customers. Systems that provide water for more than
150,000 people "are asking us to look at critical areas of
water distribution networks and conduct ‘what-if' scenarios
with regard to possible terrorist activity," says Richard
D. (Dick) Kuchenrither, senior vice president and director
of the technical applications group at Kansas City-based Black
& Veatch.
Water infrastructure security makes
the news these days, says Richard D. Fox, president of Cambridge,
Mass.-based CDM, Camp Dresser & McKee's parent company.
The public doesn't realize that many public agencies "had
been doing a lot of work on the security issue anyway," he
says. "A majority of municipalities have had the issue on
the agenda for maybe a decade....I don't think there's been
a wholesale market swing because people had been doing this
all along."
There was a temporary dip in airport-related
environmental work immediately after Sept. 11. Since then,
"It's been a very quick recovery," Fox says. Despite inconvenience
and byzantine pricing structures, the summer vacation season
has the traveling public once again moving through airports.
The Dept. of Transportation and Office of Homeland Security
are mandating safety-related improvements and the earlier
work is coming back to normal, reflecting "a tremendous pent-up
need," Fox says.
The numbers posted by the Top 200
certainly don't reflect the expected double-whammy of war
and recession, says Bob Uhler, president and CEO of MWH. The
Broomfield, Colo.-based engineering-construction firm is showing
the benefits of combining Montgomery Watson Inc., No. 12 on
last year's list, and Harza Engineering Co., No. 75. MWH ranks
No. 9, reporting $803 million in 2001 revenue, 29% above the
2000 combined total of the component parts.
"One of the stunning things about
this is that the government opened its pocketbook to the U.S.
military, but didn't reduce environmental spending," says
Uhler. "That's why [the U.S.] went from surplus to deficit.
We didn't see what we normally see, what we saw in Bosnia.
Environmental contractors are telling us there is no pressure
to redistribute funds."
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BROWNFIELDS State
efforts picking up. (Photo
courtesy of Law Environmental)
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SHAKY AT THE TOP. On last year's
list, six firms reported more than $1 billion in revenue.
This year, the billionaire's club has eight members but their
positions could be as secure as a logrolling lumberjack's.
Three California firms trod water–No. 1 U.S. Filter Corp.,
Palm Desert; No. 2 Bechtel Group Inc.; and No. 6 URS Corp.,
both San Francisco. Each recorded similar revenue levels in
2001 as in 2000. CH2M Hill Cos., Denver, grew revenue by 20%,
to maintain the No. 3 spot. At No. 4, Boise-based Washington
Group International Inc. is still recovering from the Raytheon
Engineering and Construction International Inc. acquisition
debacle but continued to add to a growing backlog. The company
recorded a 60% revenue growth from 2000 to 2001 as it worked
its way through a reorganization. In January, it emerged with
a new $350-million revolving credit arrangement. Late last
month the board adopted a shareholder rights plan designed
to prevent a hostile takeover.
Foster Wheeler Corp., Morris Plains,
N.J., slipped a notch to No. 5 this year, as revenue declined
from $1.4 billion to $1.3 billion. But the parent company's
stock slippage was more precipitous, from a high of about
$18 per share in April of last year to a recent level below
$2.50. After Chief Financial Officer Gilles A. Renaud left
in May, the company arranged for credit extensions from its
bankers. Officials aren't commenting, but sources claim the
firm is on the block.
The IT Group, No. 5 last year,
filed for bankruptcy and was purchased by The Shaw Group,
Baton Rouge, which nailed the No. 7 slot on this year's list
with $25 million less revenue than IT reported for 2000. "The
traditional environmental sector is flat, maybe slightly declining,"
says Tim Barfield, president of Shaw Environmental Group.
He doesn't expect to see double-digit growth in the environmental
sector any time soon, "but in the non-traditional areas, there
are opportunities we have as a company where we can even grow
our traditional market and regain the market share IT lost."
The No. 8 firm, Long Beach, Calif.-based
EARTH TECH, topped $1 billion for the first time, but actually
slipped a notch on the list. Of more importance to President
and CEO Diane Creel are the well-publicized problems of EARTH
TECH's parent, Hamilton, Bermuda-based Tyco International
Ltd.
When Creel engineered the sale
of EARTH TECH to Tyco in 1996, the firm was stalled at $200
million in annual revenue and Wall Street interest in environmental
firms was flagging. But she and Dennis Kozlowski, then-CEO
at Tyco, hit it off. Both loved to grow by buying. The self-proclaimed
Army brat, and her new boss–a Newark, N.J., cop's son–were
known for rapidly rolling up seemingly disparate companies
into a unified revenue engine.
But the wheels have come off for
Kozlowski, currently under indictment in New York City for
sales tax evasion and evidence tampering. His legal problems
were the nail in the coffin at Tyco. He stepped down last
month, but stockholders were already demanding his ouster.
Share prices topped $60 as recently as last December, but
fell swiftly as questions arose about alleged offshore tax
evasion and other dubious accounting practices. In recent
sessions, the stock has been trading around $12.
What this means for Creel and EARTH
TECH is still unknown, but it seems that her corporate shopping
sprees will be curtailed, at least for a while. "We have had
a pretty aggressive acquisition strategy for the past twelve
months, which has now slowed down," she says. The North American
market has been challenging this year, Creel notes, but there
are environmental opportunities related to the anthrax scare
and other post-Sept. 11 needs. In March, EPA awarded EARTH
TECH a five-year, $100-million contract to provide emergency
rapid response services in Region VI, which includes Louisiana,
Oklahoma, New Mexico and Texas.
U.S. Filter's French owner, Vivendi
Universal, is also experiencing problems that could reverberate
across the Atlantic. Jean-Marie Messier's effort to leverage
an international water company into a multimedia conglomerate
has fallen out of favor in the board room and on the street.
The stock chart for the past two years looks like a black
diamond downhill run in the French Alps: From a high above
$90 in early 2000, the stock price has traded below $20 in
recent weeks. Five directors have left the board in the past
two months. A special governance committee is trying to rein
in the maverick Messier and the cash-strapped parent company
is cutting its stake in the environmental arm, from 68% to
40%. Messier managed to save his job at a rancorous June 25
board meeting in Paris, but the directors instructed him to
slash $3.9 billion in debt from the balance sheet this year.
Vivendi Universal's core debt is about $15 billion.
By cutting its stake in the environmental
unit, Vivendi Universal may actually be helping U.S. Filter,
says Andrew D. Seidel, president and CEO. He says there was
no real synergy between Vivendi Universal's entertainment
and environmental units, making the decision "a very positive
thing for the shareholder groups of both companies." The proceeds
from Vivendi Universal's share offering in the environmental
division will raise about $2 billion, and "we'll do a secondary
offering that will raise about $1 billion, which we'll further
use to grow our business," Seidel says.
U.S. Filter also is spinning off
its non-water-related units. By the end of 2002, Seidel reports,
U.S. Filter will have sold companies valued at about $1.1
billion. "I think U.S. Filter has really hit a balance of
being able to generate significant internal growth" without
relying on further acquisitions, he says.
WAITING IN THE WINGS. Should any of the top-tier players
falter, there is no shortage of candidates ready to step in.
As usual, there was significant turnover, with 37 companies–nearly
one in five–on the list that weren't there the year before.
Distribution also was fairly even, with five of the newcomers
reporting revenue of more than $100 million, 16 under $20
million and 16 in the middle range, a popular area for mergers
and acquisitions in recent years.
"There is a lot of boom and bust
going on," says MWH's Uhler. Despite getting positive traction
from combining Montgomery Watson and Harza, he predicts that
near-term growth will be organic."We have a controlled growth
strategy. No more than 15% a year. We don't want [any more]
mergers," he says.
Others may take a different tack.
"There is a very strong pressure on prices in this market,"
says Jean-Yves Perez, Denver-based vice president for URS
Corp. "Margins are declining." URS' stock has been steady,
currently trading around $28 per share, off from a $34.80
52-week high in April, but up from a post-Sept. 11 low of
$18.20. The firm is pursuing a strategy of layoffs and acquisitions.
"This continues to be a market
of consolidation," says Perez. "The whole industry continues
to be active in mergers and acquisitions."
One advantage to consolidation
is that "with fewer firms…we've turned the corner and are
getting a better return. It gets back to being treated as
a professional and not a commodity," says Frank DeMartino,
president and chief operating officer of No. 10 Parsons Corp.
The Pasadena, Calif.-based design
and construction firm grew environmental revenue by 15% in
2001, in part by increasing its concentration on the hazardous
waste sector from 42 to 51%. The company also benefits from
being privately held, says DeMartino. "We don't have to report
to analysts, so we strategically plan on a three- to five-year
period....It seemed wrong in the dot-com era, but now, retrospectively,
it [is] a great benefit to be private," he says.
Apparently, his peers agree. Thanks
to consolidation, the number of privately held firms among
the Top 200 increased by 10 last year, to 179. That is the
most since the survey began in 1996.
In the "mature" federal environmental
marketplace, there are few opportunities but they tend to
be large ones. "We tend to chase a small number of very large
rabbits," says James W. Thiesing, group vice president for
federal operations at Jacobs Engineering Group Inc.
The Pasadena-based remediation
contractor turned in a solid performance, moving up on construction/remediation
and federal listings. It held steady in nuclear and hazardous
waste works, but slipped slightly in booking new contracts.
Thiesing is looking forward, hoping
to land work in the multibillion-dollar, treaty-driven chemical
weapon destruction program at Tooele, Utah, Newport, Ind.,
and Aberdeen, Md. Jacobs expects to compete for another round
of military base closures by 2005, as well as accelerated
cleanups at Dept. of Energy sites at Rocky Flats, Colo., Hanford,
Wash., and Fernald, Ohio, Thiesing says.
Funding pressures are pushing the
government to accelerate the pace at federal nuclear production
sites, says Ron Peterson, president of Fluor Hanford. The
Defense Dept. is moving to adopt more commercial practices
in disposing of materials and waste at large sites. "Any sort
of a stockpile that can become a weapon is going to fit in
with homeland security. It will get a high priority," he says.
Along with accelerated scheduling,
DOD will also begin to look at life-cycle costing and lump-sum
work, structuring performance-based contracts with rewards
for contractors willing to take on additional risks, he says.
The June 27 Group of Eight accord
to spend $20 billion over the next decade to help Russia dismantle
its weapons stockpile could provide a lucrative opportunity
for U.S. firms with experience on DOD cleanups. "The only
sure way to protect stockpiles is to eliminate them," says
Tom Roell, president of Fluor Federal Services. "The priorities
are being shaken up. Our challenge is figuring out where the
money will be spent, the path it will take."
Larger firms seeking big federal
contracts have an advantage, says Roell. "It's harder to get
insurance, bonding and so forth. Since 9/11, most companies
can't carry the load alone. They have to team to bid the big
jobs. Now there are two to four bidders where there used to
be six to eight on very big jobs," he says.
That could spell larger market
share for big federal players like Fluor, Bechtel Group and
CH2M Hill Cos. if the federal sector continues to expand and
the jobs get bigger. Fluor claims an 11% share of the DOE
market, says Peterson, "and a glass ceiling of 35%."
Peterson also expects the Army
Corps of Engineers will de-emphasize its Total Environmental
Restoration contracts, too. "Those risks are pretty darn small
after 9/11," he says. Consequently, Fluor is is looking for
other places to grow its federal business, such as the $11-billion
embassy rebuilding program.
"There is talk of BRAC (DOD's Base
Realignment and Closure) cleanup slowing, but we haven't seen
it yet," says Nick Masucci, president of Louis Berger Group.
The East Orange, N.J., design firm had a solid year in 2001.
It increased environmental revenue by 23%, to $109.6 million,
good enough to move up two notches on the list to No. 47.
The company increased its environmental work load and brought
U.S. work load up to the level of its international work.
Diversity was the key, according to Masucci. "Environmental
planning, permitting and environmental science are all doing
fine. We had 10% growth [in those areas] last year," he says.
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EXPERTS NEEDED DOE
wants to accelerate cleanup at former weapon sites.
(Photo courtesy of Fluor Daniels)
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ART OF THE STATES. In many ways,
the brownfields market is similar to BRAC. Remediation normally
involves the same contaminants as are found on military bases,
but brownfields usually are smaller and permitting and funding
are often handled at the state or local level. EPA continues
to stimulate brownfields work by periodically releasing grants
for pilot programs, but the real action is at the state level.
Ohio joined the list of states
cleaning up the national inventory of abandoned former industrial
sites, pumping the first $40 million into a revamped four-year,
$250-million program (ENR 6/10 p. 17).
Estimates of the number of U.S.
brownfield sites range from 400,000 to 1 million. State and
local programs are ramping up, one reason the category grew
at a 15% pace last year, almost matching the 19% growth rate
of federal work. "Brownfields range from slightly polluted
to Superfund sites," says Elwin Larson, HDR Inc.'s national
director of environmental and resource management. The Omaha-based
firm moved up a spot this year to No. 25, recording $198.4
million in environmental revenue.
Larson's view of brownfields work
is in line with many state program directors. "If we could
integrate environmental concerns with future development,
that's good business," he says.
One project was close to home.
ASARCO's old Omaha lead refinery was adjacent to a site for
a new convention center. Until the city project started, "there
was no clear motivation to demolish it and cap it," Larson
says. "With the new construction, they got a voluntary cleanup
and developed it as a 23-acre park with an interchange and
a park-and-ride. It was a great example of a brownfield that
turned the corner for the community."
Metcalf & Eddy's Somerville
says building public-private partnerships is crucial to successful
brownfields work. "We're trying to meet with developers, help
them identify sites, get them approved. Then we can help provide
cleanup services," he says.
The firm also helps municipalities
develop bid packages for developers, Somerville says. Versatility
helps. "We work with an agency or with a developer. We do
site assessments for EPA and we're a direct contractor to
them," he says. Now, "we're taking it to the next step, to
development."
Remediation is "not a regulatory-driven
situation any more. It's got to be financially driven," says
Erhardt Werth, executive vice president for guaranteed business
solutions at ARCADIS G&M Inc. The Highlands Ranch, Colo.-based
firm logged $178 million in 2001 environmental revenue, most
of it in private sector work. The firm reported $158 million
in new contracts, enough to place it among the Top 50 in that
category.
Ideally, owners want the consultant
to "clean it up and make the liability go away. A lot of clients
are looking to sell or release property," Werth says, and
if the value of the property can offset the cost of remediation,
so much the better.
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FULL TANK Water business
remains strong, as design-build work expands. (Photo
courtesy of Jordon, Jones and Goulding)
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HIGHS AND LOWS. The overall environmental
market is strong, but the economic slowdown is retarding progress
in some states. "In California there is a 23.6% budget deficit,
so we expect to see a slowdown in capital projects," says
DeMartino of Parsons. "We need a good economy to generate
a large amount of taxes. That's what funds environmental projects."
Across the country, "population
growth is fueling demand for infrastructure in the Southeast,"
says Donald R. Allen, president of Jordan, Jones & Goulding
Inc. The Norcross, Ga.-based designer grew environmental revenue
by 21% last year, but competition still dropped it three notches,
to No. 85.
"In Georgia there are several issues.
Metro Atlanta is beginning to see that we're pushing the limit
on water supply," Allen says. "We have ample supply through
2030, but beyond [then] we will have to look at doing things
differently."
Saltwater intrusion is raising
alarms along the coast and agricultural drawdowns are straining
the groundwater supply in the center of the state, Allen says.
Georgia, Alabama and Florida are trying to negotiate a tripartite
compact on water supply, but consensus is proving to be elusive.
"The challenge for us is managing
the infrastructure in a sustainable way," Allen says. The
60-million-gal-per-day F. Wayne Hill wastewater treatment
plant, with high-level solids removal and advanced treatment
for organic compounds, "is the forerunner to the kinds of
treatment plants we must provide for re-use," says Allen.
"It represents the advanced treatment that cities will have
to go to."
In Florida, the Everglades restoration
is ramping up. Billed as a $7-billion to $8-billion program,
"It will go on for decades," says HDR's Larson. His firm is
part of the consulting team mapping goals for the health of
Lake Okeechobee, the largest inland lake in the U.S. outside
the Great Lakes.
The economic slowdown could impair
Florida's ability to come up with its funding share and delay
work in the short term, "but there is too much momentum for
it to go away," Larson says.
On the Gulf Coast, Louisiana continues
to map a plan for an even larger program–the so-called Coast
2050 project to stop loss of coastal wetlands. The Corps of
Engineers estimates that 1 million acres and a valuable fishery
along the Louisiana coast will vanish by 2040 unless countermeasures
are implemented. Preliminary cost estimates are $14 billion,
much of it in dredging, levee work and water diversion.
Elsewhere, conventional water and
wastewater work continues. Design-build project delivery continues
to gain popularity with public owners. Design-build "has been
a good venue for us to pursue and secure business," says Jim
Frey, senior vice president of St- Louis-based Alberici Corp.
"The volume fluctuates, but it remains a significant portion
of our overall work."
Design-build saves 20 to 30% of
the cost, says MWH's Uhler. "We've had to bring in hard-nosed
builders to add to the front end," he says. "The front end
of design-build begs for decentralization, but the back end
begs for control to protect the risk. It's a challenge."
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