|
||
|
Facts About Chlorine and Drinking Water
Disinfection
of Drinking Water is A Critical Public Health Need
If left untreated, drinking water supplies (primarily from surface water
sources) will cause waterborne diseases such as cholera, typhoid and dysentery.
The cholera epidemic in Latin America presents a clear example of the
constant threat from waterborne disease.
"The
cholera epidemic in Latin America was fostered, at least in part, by the
misconception that DBPs pose a greater risk to public health than pathogens.
The epidemic which began in January 1991 and has now spread to all but
one Latin American country, has caused 1.3 million illnesses and almost
12,000 deaths." Horst
Otterstetter, Pan American Health Organization and Gunther Craun, Journal
AWWA Sept. 1997
In developing countries, where nearly half the population drinks contaminated
water, diarrheal diseases kill over 3 million children annually. Chlorine's Critical Disinfection Role Chlorination has played a critical role in protecting America's drinking water supply from waterborne diseases for nearly a century. According to the World Health Organization, the adoption of drinking water chlorination has been one of the most significant advances in public health protection.
Over 98 percent of U.S. water supply systems that disinfect drinking water
use chlorine. In the US we have depended on chlorine as our drinking water
disinfectant for nearly a century. Public health officials heralded water
chlorination as one of the greatest public health achievements of this
century.
Chlorine-based disinfectants are the only disinfectants that provide lasting
residual protection to protect the water from waterborne disease throughout
the distribution system from treatment plant to the consumer's tap. Alternatives
to chlorination for primary disinfection such as ozone or ultraviolet
light can not provide this residual protection. All chemical disinfectants
produce byproducts. Chlorination byproducts have been well studied compared
to the byproducts of alternatives which are just beginning to be studied.
According to the World Health Organization "disinfection by chlorine
is still the best guarantee of microbiologically safe water." New Regulations Will Reduce Disinfection Byproducts Without Compromising Microbial Protection The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is in the final stages of adding regulations that will reduce disinfection byproducts without causing waterborne diseases such as cholera [Stage I of the Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproducts Rule]. This rule was developed by the EPA with the broad support of environmentalists, water utilities, and chlorine producers. It will be finalized in November 1998. The new rule will require water utilities to use a process called enhanced coagulation to remove organic material from the water. Organic matter, in combination with any disinfectants, produces disinfection byproducts. This rule will significantly reduce disinfection byproduct levels while allowing utilities to continue to use disinfectants, such as chlorine, to kill bacteria and other disease causing microbes. |
||
|
drinking
water | pools and spas | food
and surfaces | wastewater Copyright © 2006 Water Quality and Health Council. All Rights Reserved.
|
||