This video looks at the environmental standards workflow. One of the clearest ways to understand the role of an environmental standards database is to understand the workflow it supports.

Video Transcript

The environmental standards workflow

A good way to understand environmental standards databases is to understand the workflow they support.

Each stage matters.

Stage 1. Collect data.

Monitoring begins with field and laboratory data collection.

Stage 2. Import results.

Data must be loaded into a structured system, ideally preserving analytes, units, sample types, dates, and locations.

Stage 3. Validate results

The data must be checked for consistency and readiness before comparison.

Stage 4. Identify applicable standards

This is where the standards database becomes critical. The system must select the right values for the analyte, matrix, jurisdiction, and program context.

Stage 5. Compare data against standards

The actual standards comparison is performed.

Stage 6. Flag exceedances

Results above trigger levels, guidelines, or limits should be visible immediately.

Stage 7. Review trends

A single exceedance may matter, but patterns across time usually matter more.

Stage 8. Report findings

The final output may go to project teams, clients, regulators, or public-facing portals.

This workflow is one reason standards databases are not just reference libraries. They are operational tools.

Environmental data management systems such as ESdat help automate this entire workflow.

More information on environmental standards databases

Real-life examples of environmental standards in action

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