Monday, February 26, 2018

Are Phase 1 Environmental Assessment And Property Condition Assessment The Same?

In 2008, ASTM published “Standard Guide for Property Condition Assessments: Baseline Property Condition Assessment Process” (ASTM E 2018-08) to define the process for conducting a Property Condition Assessment (PCA).

  Spills and Leaks on floor In Former Oil storage Tank area
Spills and Leaks In Former Oil Tank Room

 Actually, a PCA and an ESA have only minimal overlap, and are often complimentary. An ESA is performed to identify “Recognized Environmental Conditions (REC), which are related to releases or threatened releases of petroleum products and hazardous substances. An ESA report also has some specific regulatory aspects, related to Landowner Liability Protections (LLP). [Read more about LLPs].

ESA must be performed by “Environmental Professionals” meeting specific qualifications [Read more about qualification requirements]. If you are purchasing real estate and are concerned about environmental liabilities, a Phase I ESA is needed.

Oil Contaminated Waste Pile Discovered During Phase 1 Onsite Inspection
Oil Contaminated Waste Discovered During Onsite Inspection

A PCA is also a type of due diligence, pre-purchase, pre-lease, or post-lease inspection. However, the PCA evaluates the physical condition of buildings, systems and equipment at the property. A PCA identifies “red flags”. There are no specific qualifications required for persons performing PCAs. Because if this, there is no guarantee that the assessor’s qualifications will meet the client’s needs, simply because the assessor uses the ASTM standard.


Phase 1 environmental inspections, environmental site assessment, phase 2 testing, site cleanup 
Caltha LLP | Your Environmental Site Assessment 
and Remediation Partner

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