|
...increase in revenue to $322 million.
It was the third consecutive year of double-digit growth,
says Curt Cramer, executive vice president of the Dutch-owned
companys U.S. environmental division.
Although ARCADIS earns only 10%
of its revenue from federal work, Cramer credits the Defense
Dept.s fixed-price remediation work with helping boost
the portfolio. The company has booked about 10 such jobs to
date. We need to continue to expand that component of
our business, Cramer says. Basically these are
design-build projects for environmental work.
Others say that the fixed-price
approach may lead to site closure, but it can be expensive
and also discourages trying new technologies. Companies
cant take a risk, Scott says.
One mid-range firm that claims
to be winning business through technology is The Kleinfelder
Group Inc. The site remediation specialist boosted revenue
by 7% to $44 million in 2003, but still slipped two spots
to No. 102. As the hazardous waste market has matured, a successful
contractor must be willing to tackle more difficult,
complex, larger sites with innovative approaches, says
Dave Jenkins, principal environmental engineer.
Kleinfelder goes after fast-moving,
soluble contaminates that threaten groundwater supplies, such
as perchlorate and methyl tertiary-butyl ether (MTBE), often
by drilling horizontal wells. The company borrowed the drilling
technology from the petroleum and fiberoptic industries. Site
characterization also is crucial. We work with the best
hydrologists we can find, like Eric Nuttall of the University
of New Mexico, says Dave Cook, a Kleinfelder engineer.
The firm now is working on several
complex sites where competitors have had mixed results. Were
working on a five-mile-long perchlorate trench at the Stringfellow
Superfund site in Riverside County, Calif., Jenkins
says.
Kleinfelder also recently won a
five-year contract from the Air force Center for Environmental
Excellence with a $20-million cap. We beat up some much
larger firms to win that one, says Jenkins. We
seldom recommend pump and treat, but our costs were about
half those of the others and we cause negligible damage to
the surface.
The Haskell Co. made one of the
biggest moves up the list, climbing from No. 147 last year
to No. 67, thanks to a 72% increase in revenue to $75 million.
Most of that was from our food and beverage division,
which has captured the bottled water processing market,
says John Patton, president of Haskells civil group.
The design-build specialist also has snagged a number of small
water and wastewater treatment projects in the Florida Keys.
Patton says his division now is targeting the California environmental
market.
In the depressed solid waste marketplace,
SCS Engineers managed to boost annual revenue by 8% in 2003,
enough to move it up three notches to No. 73. Design, consulting
and construction management services on two $10-million Washington,
D.C., transfer station upgrades helped, says James J. Walsh,
president and CEO. Prospects are good for brownfields and
underground storage tank work, he adds.
Near the top of the list, Bechtel
recorded a 10% gain in revenue thanks in part to wastewater
treatment plant work in Iraq. Internationally, the company
sees a major opportunity with the British governments
move to outsource nuclear cleanup work, says Craig Weaver,
president of Energy & Environment at Bechtel National
Inc.
Even executives at some Top 200
firms with disappointing financial numbers in 2003 are optimistic
about the propsects this year. Tetra Tech recorded $709 million
in environmental revenue in 2003, a performance 46% below
its 2002 total (ENR 6/2/2003 p. 34). As a result, the firm
tumbled five spots, to No. 10.
There is no cause to worry, says
Michael Bieber, vice president of investor relations. The
2003 numbers did not count about $300 million in revenue for
hazardous waste-related emergency training that showed up
in 2002 numbers. The training, which should be included under
the environmental management sector, is growing by 10 to 20%
per year, he says.
Tetra Techs current backlog
also is healthy, with nearly $5 billion in new contracts landed
in 2003. Like many other firms, Tetra Tech will post higher
numbers in 2004, Bieber believes.
|