Your Facility Deserves
Local Expertise.
ICAP serves manufacturing and industrial facilities across five Southwest states. Every system we design, supply, and install is engineered to pass NFPA 660 inspection — or we fix it at no charge.
Every system we install comes with our pass-or-free guarantee — your inspection passes or we return and fix it at no charge.
Five States. One Standard: Pass Inspection.
Your facility’s dust collection requirements don’t change because of state lines — and neither does our standard of work. Whether you’re in Phoenix, Salt Lake City, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, or Albuquerque, you get the same engineered system design, the same NFPA 660 compliance expertise, and the same guarantee.
Arizona HQ
Your Arizona facility is in our home territory. With headquarters in Maricopa, we can typically schedule a site assessment within days — not weeks. Arizona’s manufacturing sector spans aerospace, semiconductor, food production, and metal fabrication, and we’ve built systems across all of them.
- Phoenix Metro
- Tempe & Mesa
- Chandler & Gilbert
- Goodyear & Avondale
- Tucson & Prescott
- Flagstaff & Yuma
- Aerospace manufacturing
- Semiconductor / electronics
- Welding & metal fabrication
- Food & supplement production
- Wood manufacturing
- Plastics & composites
Arizona OSHA (ADOSH) enforces OSHA standards for most private employers. Combustible dust facilities are subject to NFPA 660 (effective Jan 1, 2026) — the unified standard replacing 652, 654, and 664. Every system we install in Arizona is engineered to meet NFPA 660 requirements, and we back it with our pass-or-free guarantee. We also conduct dust hazard analyses (DHAs) for facilities that need a formal compliance record.
California
California has some of the strictest air quality and combustible dust enforcement in the country. Your facility faces compliance pressure from Cal/OSHA, the CARB, and local AQMDs — in addition to federal NFPA 660 requirements. We work in all major California metros and understand the layered compliance environment.
- Los Angeles & Long Beach
- San Diego & Oceanside
- Fresno & Bakersfield
- Sacramento & Stockton
- San Jose & Bay Area
- Riverside & San Bernardino
- Aerospace & defense
- Pharmaceutical manufacturing
- Food processing & agriculture
- Plastics & composites
- Semiconductor fabrication
- Automotive & metal fab
California facilities must meet Cal/OSHA Title 8 standards plus NFPA 660 requirements for combustible dust. Local Air Quality Management Districts (SCAQMD, BAAQMD, etc.) add permitting and emissions requirements on top of federal minimums. If your facility handles combustible dust and hasn’t completed a current dust hazard analysis (DHA), you’re exposed. We size, design, and install systems that satisfy all three layers — and back every install with our pass-or-free guarantee.
Utah
The Wasatch Front corridor — Salt Lake City through Provo and north to Ogden — is one of the fastest-growing manufacturing zones in the Southwest. Utah’s mix of food and supplement manufacturing, aerospace, battery production, and pharmaceutical facilities creates a wide range of dust collection and compliance requirements we handle routinely.
- Salt Lake City & Sandy
- Ogden & Layton
- Provo & Orem
- West Jordan & Murray
- Payson & Spanish Fork
- St. George & Cedar City
- Food & supplement manufacturing
- Nutraceutical & pharmaceutical
- Aerospace & defense
- Battery manufacturing
- Wood products & millwork
- Mining & minerals processing
Utah facilities handling powders — nutraceuticals, herbal extracts, food ingredients, battery materials — fall squarely under NFPA 660 and often require FDA cGMP-compatible dust collection systems. Utah OSHA enforces state-plan standards that meet or exceed federal OSHA requirements. We design systems for FDA-regulated environments and provide the documentation your compliance team needs, including full dust hazard analysis (DHA) support.
Nevada
Nevada’s industrial base runs deeper than Las Vegas. The Reno-Sparks corridor has become a major manufacturing and logistics hub, and mining operations throughout the state generate some of the most challenging dust profiles we encounter. If your Nevada facility handles combustible metals, silica, or process powders, NFPA 660 compliance is non-negotiable.
- Las Vegas & Henderson
- Reno & Sparks
- Carson City & Fernley
- North Las Vegas
- Elko & Battle Mountain
- Laughlin & Mesquite
- Mining & mineral processing
- Food & beverage manufacturing
- Metal fabrication & welding
- Casino & entertainment facilities
- Logistics & distribution
- Battery & EV component mfg
Nevada operates under federal OSHA jurisdiction. Mining operations above 500 feet (surface) are regulated by MSHA. Combustible dust hazards in manufacturing facilities fall under NFPA 660, with enforcement through federal OSHA. If your facility produces or handles metallic dust, silica, or agricultural powders, a current dust hazard analysis (DHA) is required — and your dust collection system needs to meet the engineering controls specified in that DHA. We handle both.
New Mexico
New Mexico’s manufacturing and energy sectors are growing, with Albuquerque anchoring aerospace and semiconductor production and the broader state supporting mining, oil and gas, and food processing. Facilities here often face dual compliance pressure from state environmental agencies and federal OSHA standards for combustible dust.
- Albuquerque & Rio Rancho
- Santa Fe & Espanola
- Las Cruces & El Paso area
- Roswell & Artesia
- Farmington & Aztec
- Clovis & Portales
- Aerospace & defense (KAFB)
- Semiconductor manufacturing
- Food & chile processing
- Mining & potash production
- Oil & gas support services
- Wood & building materials
New Mexico is a federal OSHA state for most private employers. Facilities generating combustible dust are subject to NFPA 660 requirements and OSHA’s Combustible Dust NEP (National Emphasis Program). New Mexico Environment Department (NMED) also enforces ambient air quality standards that affect dust collection system design and permitting. We size systems to meet both federal and state-level requirements and provide full pass-or-free guarantee coverage on every installation.
What Happens After You Book
Four steps from first call to passing inspection — no pressure, no guesswork.
Free Site Assessment
We visit your facility, document your dust sources, measure your CFM requirements, and identify any existing compliance gaps.
Engineered System Design
Our engineers size your system to NFPA 660 standards — ductwork, collector, filtration, and explosion protection if required.
Installation & Commissioning
Our crews handle the install and commission the system. We don’t hand off to subcontractors who don’t know the design intent.
Inspection — Guaranteed
Your system passes OSHA and NFPA 660 inspection. If it doesn’t, we return and make it right at no charge. That’s the pass-or-free guarantee.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do you serve my city if it’s not listed above?
Probably yes. The cities listed above are our most common project locations, not an exhaustive list. We serve all five states — Arizona, California, Nevada, New Mexico, and Utah — including rural and secondary markets. If you’re uncertain, schedule a free assessment and we’ll confirm coverage before you spend any time on the process.
What does the pass-or-free guarantee actually cover?
Every system we design and install is guaranteed to pass OSHA and NFPA 660 inspection. If your system is inspected and receives a citation or deficiency related to our work, we return and correct it at no charge. The guarantee covers the engineering design, the equipment we supply, and the installation work our crews perform. See our Guaranteed Compliance page for full details.
How quickly can you schedule a site assessment in California or Utah?
For Arizona, we can typically schedule within a few business days. For California, Utah, Nevada, and New Mexico, lead time depends on our current project schedule — typically one to two weeks. If you’re facing an inspection deadline or a compliance notice, let us know when you book and we’ll prioritize accordingly.
Does NFPA 660 apply to all five states the same way?
NFPA 660 is a national standard effective January 1, 2026 — it replaced NFPA 652, 654, and 664. It applies to combustible dust facilities in all five states we serve. The enforcement mechanism differs: California uses Cal/OSHA (state-plan), Utah uses Utah OSHA (state-plan), and Arizona, Nevada, and New Mexico operate under federal OSHA jurisdiction for most private employers. California adds CARB and local AQMD layers. We know each state’s enforcement environment and design accordingly.
Can you help with a dust hazard analysis (DHA) in addition to the system itself?
Yes. A dust hazard analysis (DHA) is required by NFPA 660 for facilities that handle combustible dust. We can conduct the DHA as a standalone service or as part of a full system design and install engagement. The DHA findings directly inform system sizing and explosion protection requirements — doing them together avoids the common problem of a DHA that produces recommendations your existing system can’t meet. Learn more on our Explosion Protection Assessments page.
How much does a dust collection system cost in the Southwest?
System cost depends on facility size, dust type, required CFM, and whether explosion protection is needed. Small systems for single workstations can start under $10,000. Mid-size manufacturing systems typically run $40,000–$150,000 installed. Large multi-source or high-CFM systems for food, pharma, or battery manufacturing can exceed $300,000. See our 2026 dust collection system cost guide for a full breakdown by system type and industry.
Do you offer financing for dust collection systems?
Yes. Equipment financing is available for qualifying facilities across all five states. Monthly payment options let you stay compliant without a large upfront capital outlay — which matters for mid-size manufacturers who need NFPA 660 compliance but have constrained capex budgets. Visit our financing page for details.
Ready to Get Your Facility into Compliance?
Your free site assessment includes a full dust source evaluation, preliminary system sizing, and a clear answer on what NFPA 660 compliance will require for your specific operation. No commitment. No sales pressure.
Prefer to talk first? Call us: 602-456-9661