01/12/09
Category:
General News.
(posted by:
editor)
BAD WEATHER CAUSING MAINS WATER QUALITY IRREGULARITIES
In many parts of Ireland, water is supplied from lakes, rivers,
raintanks and wells, but many sources are from borehole fed group water
schemes with high levels of dissolved lime and colour. Frequent ground water disturbances caused by severe rainfall allow
organic colour variations and microbiological issues leading to boil
water notices.
Only 1% of mains fed water is used for drinking, but as 99% is used for
the likes of bathing, washing and flushing toilets, the idea of using
exceptional quality filtered water is unlikely to be offered at source by
public or rural water schemes due to to impossible funding requirements to
provide above bottled water quality for the ultimate use of bathing and
flushing toilets even if basic EU water limits are just aimed to be
met.
Exceptional filtration for the 1% of water we use for drinking and
the 99% of household water targeted for lime removal, is only practical when
met by end users using filtration systems designed to effectively target each use. High compliance to EU
water standards by many
schemes and superior water quality for domestic use has historic, funding, infrastructural and environmental problems for
reasons listed below:
- Historically, many smaller group water schemes sourced their
water on limited budgets without pilot drilling several test
bores to optimum depths to get the best water.
- Small schemes often drilled just to find water quantity - the expense
later on to treat poor water quality to more demanding levels of legislation
may have been prohibitive.
- Even if quality water is found
at source, old pipe networks often leak the water supplied with the
risk of bacterial infection finding its way back into the supply at
leak points.
- Group water schemes are “reactive” instead of
“proactive” to water problems, relying on occasional HSE water
monitoring to inform residents affected by any contamination.
- Boil
water notices are often posted to local shops after detection of
bacteria on a particular group water schemes instead of all scheme
residents being notified individually.
- Lime is no danger to
health and is found at high levels on most schemes. Water regulations
do not set any limits for lime levels, yet it causes extensive and
costly damage.
- Surprisingly, 3 things that put people off
water; odour, colour and taste, have less importance as testing
parameters, even when recipients of scheme water voice objections.
- Bacteria
has always been given serious priority and has sample limits of “zero”
in water tests, making chlorine dosing essential to mains water adding
to taste and smell.
- Micro-organisms such as cryptosporidium
evade chlorination and small group schemes, even large city schemes
have not invested money to upgrade and deal with problems.
- Annual
spring flooding is problematic to the source water quality of
a great number of lake, river and borehole sourced waters, leading to long
periods of contamination.
- Water pressure on many schemes is
poorly regulated and if insufficient or excessively high, too many
schemes rarely address pressure variations promptly and correctly.
- It
is troublesome for water schemes to address 1) all infrastructural mains
pipe problems and 2) meeting total compliance of all EU directives and 3) removing water hardness and 4) ensuring an exceptionally consistent level of potable quality against the
problems of severe weather variations causing frequent highly disturbed
ground water quality - all issues then needing to be met to the ultimate point of total consumer satisfaction and trust