A relatively inexpensive method for replacing aging water pipelines across the nation may come with health risks, a USA TODAY investigation has found. Known as cured-in-place pipe lining, or CIPP, the ...
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. -- New research is calling for immediate safeguards and the study of a widely used method for repairing sewer-, storm-water and drinking-water pipes to understand the potential ...
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — An in-depth review of environmental protections for a common storm water culvert repair practice — cured-in-place pipe repair, or CIPP — has revealed differing installation ...
Many of those dollars already are flowing to cured-in-place pipe lining projects. Yet the process carries an inherent public health risk that the industry has downplayed, and government regulators ...
It’s more convenient than traditional pipe rehabilitation projects. And it’s already been used to repair hundreds of millions of miles of underground infrastructure in the United States alone.
When a municipality repairs water or sewer pipes, it faces what seems like an easy decision: Dig up roads to replace the pipes entirely, or thread a tube of polymer resin through the damaged pipes, ...
Dublin, Dec. 02, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Cured-In-Place Pipe Market by Diameter Type, by Resin Type, by Fabric Type, by Curing Type, by Weaving Type, by Coating Type, and by Region, Size, Share, ...