AirZone maintains a highly qualified staff, a vast array of air sampling equipment and a laboratory dedicated to the testing and analysis of air and related services in indoor air and ambient air environments, industrial hygiene applications, health and safety applications, and many related areas.
AirZone's unique ability to provide turnkey air quality services including development of protocols, statistical study design, modeling and monitoring and comprehensive reporting is the solution for many of our clients seeking assistance with their air quality requirements. Our breadth of experience provides us with a portfolio of completed projects that our clients respect. Specialties include iaq testing and sampling for VOCs and other contaminants the add to the pollution of indoor environments, modeling emissions and point of impingement quantities from manufacturing facilities and specialty analysis and testing of indoor and ambient air.
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| Thursday Feb 14, 2008 | Winter 2008 News Bulletin |
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We encourage you to check out the AirZOne Winter 2008 news bulletin as it contains updates to federal and provincial environmental standards, and the proposed actions which your company should take in order to meet them.
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| Tuesday Jul 17, 2007 | International Polar Year |
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Airzone has obtained a multi-year contract with Environment Canada to conduct monitoring for Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) under the IPY (International Polar Year) program in Canada and Russia and possibly other jurisdictions.
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| Tuesday Jun 26, 2007 | Continued Work |
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Airzone continues to work on air permit applications for various industries; more recent examples include acoustic assessments for a home construction facility, and general air applications for a Tire Manufacturing facility, Coffee Roasting operation, Auto Bodyshop, R&D Facility and a Rubber Hose manufacturer.
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| Tuesday Jun 26, 2007 | Bill C-30: Canada’s Clean Air Act – Committee Report |
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On October 19, 2006, Bill C-30 received the first reading (see Winter 2007 News Bulletin). The Act was sent to Committee in December 2007 and the Committee Report was published in March 2007. Highlights of the changes proposed by the Committee include: emphasis on Canada’s commitment to the Kyoto Protocol, identification of “significant areas” vulnerable to toxic releases or that contain a significant volume of toxic releases (the Government will have the power to obtain any information deemed necessary for release of toxics into the area), and, the creation of air standards across Canada, divided into different zones. If the air quality standard is not met in a particular zone, then air emission standards will be imposed upon industrial emissions in the zone.
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