PCA Revives Industry Group in Support of Cement-Based Water Infrastructure

Further guidance is needed to address the complex and expensive problems that plague U.S. water infrastructure, including dam maintenance and reliability.

Hoover Dam
Hoover Dam
Elisabeth Lindsay/Unsplash
PCA 549890e1adc3d

The Portland Cement Association (PCA) announced the re-establishment of a Geotechnical Group to support cement-based solutions for water resources to coincide with National Dam Safety Awareness Day on May 31.

The group will boost the technical support available for dam safety nationwide and further supplement PCA guidance for dam safety officials to help address the complex and expensive problems that plague U.S. water infrastructure, including dam maintenance and reliability.

“America deserves safe, strong and resilient water infrastructure; our economy depends on it,” says PCA president and CEO Michael Ireland. “Water infrastructure built with concrete is long-lived, has a low life cycle cost and is resilient to man-made and natural disasters.”

According to the America Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) 2017 Infrastructure Report Card, the average age of the 90,580 dams in the U.S. is 56 years, and the number of deficient high-hazard potential dams has climbed to an estimated 2,170 or more.

Cement-based solutions such as roller-compacted concrete, mass concrete, soil-cement, deep soil mixing, jet grouting, concrete slurry walls and concrete mats have a long history of water infrastructure applications that have been employed on projects with cost-saving and long-lasting results.

For more information, contact PCA senior director of market development Alpa Swinger.            

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