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In the News…
Public Health and Drinking Water News Briefs
| May 18, 2007
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| CDC's
Recreational Water Illness Prevention Week to be May 21-27 |
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This year's
National Recreational Water Illness Prevention Week, designated
by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for
the week of May 21 -27, is to highlight the importance of healthy
swimming behaviors. Specifically, the objective is to prevent Recreational
Water Illnesses (RWIs), which are associated with outbreaks in
swimming pools, water parks, hot tubs, lakes, rivers, and oceans.
Sixty-two
percent of RWI outbreaks are related to the chlorine-resistance
pathogen, Cryptosporidium, which is introduced into the pool by
swimmers who are ill with diarrhea. Their spread is facilitated
to other swimmers when they swallow the contaminated water.
Although anyone can get sick from RWIs, healthy swimming behaviors
play an important role in halting their spread.
According to
the CDC and the Water and Quality Health Council's Healthy Pools
Campaign, some of the best way pool operators can prevent against
RWIs, include:
- Regularly
adding chlorine to the pool water.
- Testing pool
levels daily - at a minimum - for proper disinfection.
- Conduct "shock
treatments" every week.
For additional
information about healthy swimming behaviors, please visit:
WQ&HC Healthy
Pools
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| New
Water Filtration Materials Help Ensure Safe Drinking Water |
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A new generation
of water filtration materials, termed membrane filtration,
is enabling municipalities and industries in the United States and
water-short countries overseas to produce safe drinking water from
supplies contaminated with salts and other undesirable compounds.
Recent improvements
in the design and chemistry of membrane filters based on polymers
such as polvinylidene fluoride, polyamide, and polypropylene have
made it possible to economically screen out contaminants. To
make unsafe, even deadly water potable, these polymeric filters
remove a range of impurities, salts, and suspended organic matter
that otherwise impart poor taste, smell, and appearance.
Much of the
demand for water filtration in the United States results from increasingly
stringent Federal regulations for drinking water drawn from surface
sources. A growing market for membrane filtration has emerged
in Florida, Texas, California and other locales that must treat
brackish water. Demand for this technology is also strong abroad,
especially in areas such as the Middle East that face severe water
shortages and produce drinking water by desalination of sea water.
For more information
on this new technology, please visit:
Membrane
Filtration Technology
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| China
to invest over $75 Billion in Water Projects over next Five Years |
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Chinese officials
recently announced a commitment to invest more than $77.72 billion
in water projects as part of the country's 11th Five-Year Program
(2006-2010). The announcement was made to attendees of the recent
China Water Congress 2007 in Beijing. A portion of the funds
will go towards water supply infrastructure and new sewage treatment
facilities.
In the interim,
China will build 1,000 new sewage treatment plants. It is estimated
that by the year 2010 the rate of water supply systems will reach
90 percent in all cities.
Additionally,
China will invest $3.85 billion on improvements to dams and rural
drinking water systems. Some of this money has been allocated as
follows:
- $415.8 million
- reinforcement of reservoir banks
- $779.7 million
- safe drinking water projects for rural residents
The nation has
strived for years to attain safe drinking water but has had difficulty
keeping pace with its rapidly escalating population. To achieve
its goals, China will rely on foreign investment, particularly in
waste water treatment projects.
For additional
information, please visit:
Chinese
Water Market Welcomes Foreign Investment
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| Drinking
Tap Water to be Restricted at Beijing Olympics |
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Officials in
Beijing have warned Olympic visitors that the city's drinking
water will not be available from taps except for those residing
within the Olympic Village. Relatively few of the city's 15
million residents drink water from the tap; instead they rely predominantly
on bottled water.
Beijing's location
contributes to its long-term water shortage problem. The city
has no major rivers and suffices on rainfall, underground supplies
and support from surrounding provinces and cities for water. The
city is currently experiencing a decade-long drought, which has
also exacerbated its fragile water supply.
A canal will
divert water from river-rich central China to the arid north is
slated to go online in April 2008, offering some relief to Beijing's
limited supply. Government officials have spent billions to
clean and modernize the city's water systems but its efforts have
remained insufficient
For more information
on the Beijing water shortage, please visit:
Beijing
Water Shortage
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In The News-is
a bi-weekly, online service from the Water Quality & Health
Council. The publication is updated every other Friday and can
be viewed by logging onto www.waterandhealth.org.
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