NTH Consultants
Contact Us
  • Home
  • Markets
    • Energy Market
    • Industry Market
    • Water Market
    • Transportation
    • Community Development
  • Services
    • Geotechnical Engineering >
      • Geophysical Services
      • Mapping
      • Shoreline Services
      • Civil Site Engineering and Design
      • Construction Materials & Geotechnical Testing Services
      • Electric Substation Services
      • Geotechnical Engineering for Transportation Facilities
      • Underground Engineering Services
      • Subsurface Utility
      • Signature Projects
    • Environmental Services >
      • PFAS
      • Ecological Services
      • Environmental Health Services
      • Environmental Remediation Services
      • Environmental Compliance
      • Environmental Permitting
      • Environmental Site Assessments
      • Ecological Services for the Energy Market
      • Air Quality Permitting and Compliance
      • Brownfield Site Redevelopment
      • Environmental, Health & Safety Training for Employee Development
      • Hydrogeologic Studies
      • Landfill Related Services
      • Site Acquisition and Redevelopment
      • Storage Tank Services
      • Signature Projects
    • Facilities Engineering >
      • Decommissioning
      • Structural Condition Assessment Rehab
      • Bridge Engineering Services
      • Asset Management Services
      • Concrete Restoration
      • GIS Services
      • Masonry Evaluation Services
      • Pavement Engineering and Consulting
      • Roofing Technology Services
      • Structural Condition Assessment
      • Signature Projects
  • Projects
  • About Us
    • Mission + Core Values
    • Leadership
    • News and Events
    • Employee Portal
  • Webinars
    • Emergency Actions Plans Webinar
  • Careers
    • Why Join NTH
    • Who We Are
    • Career Opportunities
    • NTH Internship Program
  • Blog
  • Contact Us

Free Webinar:
​Anatomy of Microbially-Induced Corrosion of Concrete Lined Sewers​

September 19 , 2 017
1 2 : 0 0 p.m. E T  - 1:00 p.m. ET


​Concrete sanitary sewers throughout the country are deteriorating due to corrosion. For many years, microbial induced corrosion (MIC) was known only to occur in large cities, but relatively unseen in the rest of the country. Now, MIC is common throughout the United States and other parts of the world. This webinar will review the causes of MIC, methods of evaluation, and processes for mitigating the resulting damage.

Register Now

Anatomy Of Microbially-Induced Corrosion Of Concrete Lined Sewers 

Webinar Speakers:
Picture
Harry R. Price, P.E.
Mr. Price is a Senior Principal Engineer with NTH Consultants, Ltd. in Detroit, Michigan. He has over 35 years experience in the investigation and evaluation of underground facilities, including pipelines, water tunnels, aeration basins, water reservoirs, and retention basins. Mr. Price has authored numerous papers on condition evaluation and underground restoration, including a recent article on Microbially-Induced Corrosion on concrete lined sewers for Michigan Water Environment Association’s Matters Magazine.

Picture
John R. Kosnak, P.E.
Mr. Kosnak is a Principal Engineer with NTH Consultants, Ltd. and has over 29 years of experience with condition assessment surveys, restoration of concrete structures, construction materials, construction QA/QC, and geotechnical engineering. He is certified in NASSCO’s PACP/ MACP/ LACP as well as the Inspector Training and Certification Program for Cured-in-Place- Pipe (CIPP). Mr. Kosnak has also co-authored articles that have appeared in Underground Construction, The International Concrete Repair Institute’s Concrete Repair Bulletin and Michigan Water Environment Association’s Matters magazines.