Environmental Due Diligence
Phase I Environmental Site Assessments (ESA)
Before purchasing commercial property, understanding the environmental condition of the land is just as important as evaluating the structure. A Phase I ESA identifies potential contamination risks and environmental liabilities — protecting buyers, investors, and lenders before closing.
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What Is a Phase I ESA?
Identify Environmental Risks Before You Buy
A Phase I Environmental Site Assessment (ESA) is a professional environmental evaluation conducted to determine whether a property has any potential contamination or environmental concerns. The assessment identifies Recognized Environmental Conditions (RECs) that may indicate the presence of hazardous substances or petroleum products on the site.
Under federal environmental laws, property owners may be responsible for cleaning up contamination even if they did not cause it — making a Phase I ESA one of the most important steps in commercial property due diligence.
Phase I assessments are commonly required during:
- Commercial property purchases
- Real estate financing or refinancing
- Property development projects
- Investment due diligence
- Property transfers or ownership changes
Assessments are conducted in accordance with ASTM E1527 standards — the recognized industry guideline for environmental due diligence.
Historical Property Research
Review of historical aerial photos, fire insurance maps, and land use records to determine how the property was used in the past.
Site Inspection
Visual evaluation of the property for signs of chemical storage, stained soil, storage tanks, or improper waste disposal areas.
Environmental Database Review
Review of EPA, state, and local environmental databases including Superfund sites, UST records, and cleanup programs.
Environmental Risk Report
A formal report documenting site conditions, historical uses, database findings, identified RECs, and recommendations for further investigation if needed.
5 Components of Every Assessment
What Is Included in a Phase I Environmental Assessment?
A Phase I ESA is a research-based investigation designed to identify potential environmental concerns without physical testing of soil or groundwater. It involves five key components.
Step 01
Historical Property Research
Historical uses such as gas stations, industrial facilities, or dry cleaners may indicate potential contamination risk. Records reviewed include aerial photos, fire insurance maps, property records, and previous environmental reports.
Step 02
Site Inspection
A physical site visit to identify visible environmental concerns — including chemical storage areas, storage tanks, stained soil, waste disposal areas, and potential contamination from neighboring properties.
Step 03
Environmental Database Review
Federal, state, and local databases are reviewed — including EPA hazardous waste sites, underground storage tank records, Superfund sites, and state environmental cleanup programs for the property and nearby areas.
Step 04
Interviews with Owners & Occupants
Current and past property owners, tenants, and managers are interviewed to gather information about historical uses, fuel storage practices, chemical handling, and any known environmental incidents or spills.
Step 05
Environmental Risk Report
A written report summarizing site conditions, historical uses, database findings, site inspection observations, any identified Recognized Environmental Conditions (RECs), and recommendations for Phase II testing if needed.
If Concerns Are Found
Phase II ESA — Next Steps
If the Phase I identifies potential concerns, a Phase II ESA may be recommended. This involves physical testing of soil, groundwater, or building materials — including soil sampling, groundwater testing, and laboratory analysis.
Not all Phase I assessments lead to Phase II — it is only recommended when potential contamination risks are identified.
Why It Matters
Why Phase I Environmental Assessments Are Important
Environmental contamination can create significant financial and legal risks. Under federal law, property owners may be responsible for cleanup costs even if they didn’t cause the contamination — making a Phase I ESA one of the most critical steps in any commercial transaction.
Reduce Environmental Liability
Identify potential contamination before closing so you can negotiate protections or walk away — rather than inheriting costly remediation obligations.
Meet Lender Requirements
Many lenders require a Phase I ESA before financing commercial transactions — our reports meet ASTM E1527 industry standards.
Make Informed Decisions
A Phase I ESA provides the environmental data you need to proceed with confidence or take appropriate action before any purchase is finalized.
Schedule a Phase I Environmental Assessment with Redfish
Whether you’re purchasing commercial property, securing financing, or evaluating development land — our Phase I ESAs provide the environmental documentation needed to reduce risk and protect your investment. Serving Houston and surrounding areas.
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