Verification of sampling is the very last method to prove remediation has worked. To put it bluntly, the evidence you are using to demonstrate that soil left on site is suitable for its intended use (e.g., housing, garden, or contractor unit).
Once contaminated, soil is treated, removed, or capped, and an environmental consultant collects samples from agreed locations and depths. These are typically determined by a specific number of sample collections included in the remediation strategy. These samples are then analysed in a laboratory for the contaminants you fear (e.g., hydrocarbons, heavy metals, asbestos, and solvents).
Results are validated against the site target levels. Assuming they qualify for validation, this way you can prove the risks have lowered to a good standard. If they do not, then that does not necessarily mean a “reboot” – it might just involve added remediation time for a specific area of focus; more treatment steps to correct the problem, or additional rounds of testing necessary to solidify what the issue actually is. For Soil Remediation, contact //soilfix.co.uk/services/soil-remediation
The project team collates everything into a validation report, essentially a ‘sign-off’. This usually contains what was encountered, the actions taken to deal with this finding, waste transfer notes, sample locations, and the type from which samples were obtained, lab certificates, and whether or not it meets the agreed targets. Many site developers will have to sign off on this document before the contaminated land conditions are discharged.
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