NEXPERA provides in-person training regularly. Check out our upcoming schedule here and subscribe to fuming acid information or sulfuric acid information to be among the first to learn about new sessions before they fill up. Many of our training events are eligible for Continuing Education Unit credits.

Fuming Acid Spill Mitigation Workshop

June 8th and June 15th, 2025

Our hands-on Spill Mitigation Workshops are held near Las Vegas, Nevada, every three years. The next one is scheduled for June 2025. Attendees are able to witness fuming sulfuric acid spills in a safe, controlled environment and are taught how to mitigate, decontaminate and neutralize accidental releases. The training enhances emergency preparedness and consists of 12 hours of classroom training and 10+ hours of field work and meets the requirements for two Continuing Education Units (CEUs).

Registration will open in February 2025. Check back here for more information and the link at that time.

2025 Workshop Brochure

2025 Workshop Registration

Fuming Acid Seminar

Date TBD: Coming 2027

The next fuming sulfuric acid seminar will cover SO3, Oleum and CSA fuming sulfuric acid and will be scheduled for 2026. The event will cover fuming sulfuric acid properties, PPE, emergency response, and transportation and technical information. The training is critical for those who handle fuming sulfuric acid including first responders, local emergency planning committee members and other HazMat groups. We will post the next seminar here as soon as it is scheduled. To be among the first notified, click here to subscribe to periodic fuming sulfuric acid information.

Hear what some 2022 attendees are saying:

“Anyone who transports these materials or is expected to respond to these materials when they have an incident needs to attend this training.”

Dustin Ballman, Lieutenant for the Bowling Green, Ohio, Fire Department

“If you’re a transporter, a first responder that has these types of chemicals traversing through your communities, it’s very, very important to come out and see how they actually react in the field if they are released and have the training to know how to mitigate those incidents.”

Mark Allan, Dangerous Goods Officer, Canadian National Railway