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Why hasn't the stock reacted to this good press release:
  LAWRENCEVILLE, N.J., Sept. 10 /PRNewswire/ -- Envirogen, Inc. (ENVIROGEN)           (Nasdaq: ENVG) announces that the Office of Biological and Environmental           Research at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE/OBER) has named ENVIROGEN and           the Department of Geosciences at Princeton University as Co-Principal           Investigators in a recently awarded grant totaling $2.8 million.  Under the           terms of the three-year grant, ENVIROGEN and Princeton University will conduct           an interdisciplinary field research program in bacterial transport.  This           information is critical toward developing a more efficient biological           degradation approach for groundwater contaminated with toxic metals and           radionuclides.  ENVIROGEN's share of the grant, administered under DOE/OBER's           Natural and Accelerated Bioremediation Research Program (NABIR) and awarded to           a team comprising multiple disciplines, is $716,558.               The project, "Enhancement of Bacterial Transport in Aerobic and Anaerobic           Environments: Assessing the Effects of Metal-Oxide Chemical Heterogeneity,"           will focus on bioaugmentation, or the injection of bacteria into the           subsurface, to remediate metallic and radionuclide contaminants present in           groundwater at DOE sites.  Bioaugmentation is a cost-effective alternative to           traditional "pump and treat" cleanup methods but has met with the technical           difficulty of moving bacteria, which adhere strongly to solids, within an           aquifer throughout the contaminated zone.  Although some field-scale research           on aerobic bacterial transport has been published, very little reliable data           exists on bacterial transport under anaerobic conditions, which are likely to           occur within a contaminated aquifer environment.               This work will build upon previous bacterial transport research conducted           by ENVIROGEN under a grant by the DOE Subsurface Science Program directed by           Dr. Frank Wobber, Program Manager at DOE/OBER.  That project, "Subsurface           Transport of Bacteria With Altered Adhesion Characteristics," examined the           relationship between bacterial adhesion and transport under aerobic           conditions.  The new NABIR grant will go beyond this previous research to           include bacterial transport under anaerobic conditions.  This is particularly           significant for remediation purposes because most contaminated aquifers have           little or no dissolved oxygen.  Anticipated accomplishments of this work           include: a mechanistic understanding of the role of metal oxides, dissolved           metals and anaerobicity in the transport of bacteria; the development of           methods to enhance transport of bacteria; and the development of a           bioaugmentation strategy for bioremediation of metal and radionuclide           contaminated aquifers.               Dr. Harch Gill, President and CEO of ENVIROGEN said, "The NABIR funding is           a unique opportunity to increase our knowledge of bacterial transport in the           field under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions.  The results of the project           will potentially provide the fundamental building blocks in the development of           a cost-efficient biological treatment approach targeted at a new business area           for ENVIROGEN -- metals and radionuclides."  Dr. Wobber added, "The team's           combined expertise in geology, microbiology, hydrology, chemistry and           geophysics will enable us to considerably advance our knowledge in this           field."  Included on the team are:  the University of Montana, the Lawrence           Berkeley National Laboratory, Old Dominion University, the University of           California at Davis, the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and Florida           State University.               ENVIROGEN is a leading technology-based environmental systems and services           company that provides solutions to industrial effluent and hazardous waste           remediation problems.  The Company also designs and implements integrated           systems for the on-site treatment of organic contaminants from soils and           groundwater.               Statements made in this press release related to the DOE/OBER's NABIR           Program and ENVIROGEN's interest in and ultimate success at commercializing           products and/or services based on the results of the Program are forward           looking and are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Securities           Litigation Reform Act of 1995.  Such statements involve risks and           uncertainties which may cause results to differ materially from those set           forth in these statements.  In addition, the economic, competitive,           governmental, technological and other factors identified in ENVIROGEN's           filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission could affect such results.
            SOURCE  Envirogen, Inc.               -0-                             09/10/97               /CONTACT:  Gale Smith, Corporate Communications of ENVIROGEN,           609-936-9300/               (ENVG)
            CO:  Envirogen, Inc.; U.S. Department of Energy; Princeton University           ST:  New Jersey           IN:  ENV           SU:  JVN
            PD-JS            -- PHW008 --           6146 09/10/97 09:39 EDT prnewswire.com |  
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