Environmental Services
EarthCentric provides environmental assessment and monitoring services over a wide range of projects and landscapes. We work on construction, infrastructure, and land-use projects, and across diverse aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems.
Our services span from site-specific assessments to broader land, resource, and ecosystem-management and protection contexts. We offer practical end-to-end project support that responds to the specific conditions and sensitivities of each site.
Environmental Services include:
- Ecological assessments, monitoring, management plans
- Environmental monitoring (EM) for construction and infarastructure projects
- Erosion & Sediment Control planning and inspection
- Environmental Protection Planning (CEMP & EPP)
- Environmental documentation and compliance
planning support - Terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem baseline inventories
- Fish, wildlife and habitat surveys
- Water quality monitoring
- Project management
- First Nation liaison
- GIS mapping and spatial analysis
- Scientific and technical communication
This work often involves a combination of environmental consulting and ecological assessment, depending on the scope and goals of the project.
Environmental Consulting
Our team provides on site environmental monitoring for construction, infrastructure, and land-use projects. Our service includes project specific environmental planning, erosion and sediment control (ESC) planning and inspections, environmental protection planning (CEMP/EPP), regulatory coordination, and compliance-focused documentation. This work supports project implementation while emphasizing conservation of natural ecosystems.
Ecological Assessment & Monitoring
We provide ecological assessment and monitoring services to support understanding of lands, waters, and wildlife, and how they change over time. This includes designing, implementing, and reporting on monitoring programs in diverse terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems and a range of species.
Projects range in scale from individual properties to a larger landscape and resource management areas.