Plumbing government green plumbing why are we at this age make a difference articles that i read
Monday, June 14, 2010
very interesting a comment about Chloramines
Saturday, June 12, 2010
i have been saying this for years Chloramines
Shift to 'chloramines' brings water concerns
By Patrick Anderson Staff Writer
When the Babson drinking water treatment plant reopens this summer after months of state-mandated emergency repair work, it will employ a new chemical disinfectant system intended to prevent a repeat of last year's bacteria crisis.
But a group of residents fear the new chemical disinfectants, called chloramines, could actually make Gloucester drinking water more dangerous.
Citing a body of Internet-posted research and grassroots campaigns across the country to stop the spread of chloramines, the residents, led by local nurse Pat Murphy, are calling for the city to delay the switchover.
"I want the city representatives to know there is another whole side to chloramine in hopes that this can be delayed so that it can be investigated more," Murphy said Thursday. "It is not proven to be safe."
Chloramines are chemical combinations of chlorine and ammonia used to purge bacteria from drinking water throughout the country, including water systems in Dallas, Tampa, Houston, San Francisco and the Boston-area Massachusetts Water Resource Authority.
In New England, 135 communities covering an estimated 3.4 million people use chloramines to disinfect their drinking water, according to the New England Water Works Association, an industry group.
Before the introduction of chloramines, straight chlorine disinfection was the standard treatment process for drinking water, and it's the current chemical used in secondary treatment in Gloucester, Rockport and Manchester.
The advantage of chloramines for water utilities, backers say, is that the chemicals are more stable than straight chlorine and do not bind as easily with organic compounds in water.
When chlorine binds to organic matter, such as sediments, it loses its ability to fight bacteria and also causes "disinfection by-products," such as trihalomethanes, which have been found to be harmful.
This has been a particular problem in Gloucester, which has an antiquated water treatment and delivery system that has struggled for years to keep enough free chlorine in outlying parts of a 120-mile pipe network.
The water emergency last summer, a bacteria bloom that resulted in 20-day boil water order, put the issue front and center.
Insufficient chlorine exacerbated by the Babson plant failure allowed bacteria to grow, which required additional chlorine to be pumped into the system. That, in turn, caused the system to far exceed the allowable levels of trihalomethanes in the water.
When the state Department of Environmental Protection stepped in and mandated the city retrofit its drinking water treatment system to hit a number of new benchmarks, one of the first things to come up was a switch to chloramines.
"They may not have come out and said it in the consent order, but verbally they said we are going to chloramines," said city Public Works Director Michael Hale said. "There are only two methods and chloramines are the only other option."
In the weeks when the state and city were considering how to solve the problems in the water system, Hale said the city laid out a series of options that would have stuck with chlorine, but the state told him "you can't achieve the objectives with other means."
Without increasing the effectiveness of chemical disinfectants, the only other solution would be to remove nearly all of the organic matter in the water — something Hale said would likely require a new water treatment plant and replacement of around 80 miles of 19th century cast-iron pipe.
A new treatment plant alone has been estimated to cost $40 million and replacing the pipe system could cost hundreds of millions and take many years to complete.
Weighing the risks of various chemicals in public drinking water and the risks of not using them is complicated and in the case of chloramines, doubt and the absence of information on the affects of the chemicals is driving the concerns.
While the byproducts resulting from chlorine are closely regulated, as evidenced by the Gloucester violations, the byproducts caused by chloramines are not.
"I have heard they are basing their approach on old information," Murphy said Thursday. "They themselves have said they will be regulating chloramines in coming years. Why not wait until they have done more research."
Murphy began investigating the impacts of chloramines after one of her patients mentioned them.
The most prominent group questioning chloramines is the California-based Citizens Concerned About Chloramine, which has been joined by groups in Pennsylvania and Vermont.
Literature and research pointed to by chloramine skeptics suggests the chemical may corrode pipes, cause skin rashes, kill lab mice, and increase rates of asthma and cancer.
The federal government and state of Massachusetts, however, say chloramines are safe.
"The Environmental Protection Agency believes that water disinfected with monochloramine that meets regulatory standards has no known or anticipated adverse health effects, including skin problems," the federal agency says on its website.
The Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection "doesn't have a preference" which disinfectants communities use, spokesman Ed Coletta said Thursday. The best choice, he said, depends on the particular water system.
According to Coletta, the DEP did not require Gloucester to switch to chloramines after the boil order; it only mandated that the city "complete a chemical system evaluation and take a look at alternative disinfectant systems."
The city is required by the state to have the Babson treatment plant ready to run by July 1, and Hale said the city is on target.
If the state doesn't force them, Hale said the city may hold off on turning on Babson and chloramines, until later in the summer, because there is plenty of water in the West Gloucester reservoirs.
Right now, the city has said the only groups who may be affected by the switch are those with kidney dialysis machines and people with fish tanks, both of whom may have to change their equipment.
After Murphy and her group of residents spoke to the Gloucester City Council about their concerns about chloramines, they were invited to return later in the month and brief the council more thoroughly on the matter.
Hale said he does not dismiss the concerns of the residents fearful of chloramines, but trusts the legion of regulators who say chloramines are OK and agrees that for Gloucester there is little alternative.
"Chlorine," Hale said, "is not working."
Patrick Anderson can be reached at 978-283-7000, x3455, or panderson@gloucestertimes.com.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010
the top 50 treatment s of water The Artemis Project
he 2010 Competition is now underway! We are currently accepting company recommendations
“[The competition] has been a nice boost for us to have our business recognized as one of the top companies in the water industry.” Bill Yost, CEO, Electrolytic Ozone Inc. (EOI)
"[The Artemis Project Top 50 Competition] has given Epuramat considerable exposure and recognition, a much needed boost. [That] our reach has gone global so quickly shows that The Artemis Project Top 50 Competition is the perfect vehicle to accomplish this [with] our limited PR budget." Epuramat was recently named a Technology Pioneer by the World Economic Forum.
The Artemis Project sponsored the first Top 50 Water Companies Competition to identify the leading game-changing technologies that provide venture grade investment opportunities in the water sector.
The competition goes beyond identifying visionary or exciting technology to assess a company's ability to become an industry leader through market opportunity coupled by a depth of intellectual property and know-how. The Artemis Project Company Rating Matrix combines these measures with an evaluation of the company management team and its investors. The judging criteria included ipCapital Group's proprietary patent scoring algorithm, ipDimensional Scoring, which objectively ranks companies within a particular sector based on the relative value of its patents.
Principal Partner, ipCapital Group
Senior Technical Advisor, MS-Zander, USA
Founding CEO, O2 Environmental
Managing partner, RCI Consulting
Principal, The Artemis Project
Support:
- Regan Communications
- The Artemis Project
Top 50 in the Press and Online
ipCG Dimensional Scoring: ipCG developed a proprietary method of relative ranking for patents based on studying patterns in successfully monetized patents in the marketplace. Thus the factors in our model correlate to value in a business transaction rather than hypothetical measurements of patent value. Not all patents are created alike, and those that exhibit key characteristics such as technical breadth and citation by other companies correlate with more valuable IP. Particularly when it comes to shareholder value, M&A, licensing, or IP litigation, perceived value of patents does matter, and in a business deal, a solid IP portfolio becomes an attractive piece of the overall value proposition.
Judging Criteria:
We have rendered our opinion based on the material provided in the company application. We have assumed that the companies have submitted this information in good faith and that the information is accurate.
In addition, we have assumed an optimistic perspective that the teams behind each of these companies can fulfill the promise of their early-stage ventures.
A venture-grade investment opportunity is defined as a company that spends a significant up-front investment to develop IP and know-how that enables it to: create a fully developed solution to an urgent, strategic problem; address a large, mass market which provides for sustainable, rapid growth; address a market of customers with similar needs that can use an off-the-shelf product and make decisions within in a 3 months to one-year time frame and then purchase significant units of the product; increase sales rapidly; establish a sustainable leadership position with a high profit margin.
The Artemis Project is proud to announce the winners of its first annual Top 50 Water Companies Competition. This award distinguishes advanced water and water-related technology companies as leaders in their trade for helping to build water into one of the great high-growth industries of the 21st Century. The companies were selected by a panel of experts based on an integrated matrix of four criteria: technology, intellectual property and know-how, team and market potential. Congratulations to each of the The Artemis Project's Water Top 50! Congratulations, also, to the 5 companies we are honoring as leaders in the industry.
1 | AbTech Industries, Inc. | Arizona, USA | Storm water filtration | |
2 | Oasys Water, Inc. | Massachusetts, USA | Membrane-based water purification | |
3 | Seldon Technologies, Inc. | Vermont, USA | Water purification/Nanotech | |
4 | Emefcy | Caesarea, Israel | Waste processing/beneficial waste harvesting | |
5 | NanoH2O | California, USA | Membrane-based Water purification/Nanotech | |
6 | SolarBee, Inc. | North Dakota, USA | Disinfection, water quality | |
7 | AquaPure | Upper Galilee, Israel | Disinfection, advanced oxidation process | |
8 | HydroPoint | California, USA | Automated irrigation/ Evapotranspiration | |
9 | MIOX Corporation | New Mexico, USA | Disinfection, onsite chlorine and mix oxidant generation | |
10 | ScFi | Cork, Ireland | Waste processing/beneficial waste harvesting | |
11 | Puralytics | Oregon, USA | Disinfection/LED Ultraviolet | |
12 | Globe Protect, Inc. | California, USA | Physical water purification/Acoustic water purification | |
13 | Aqua-PhyD, Inc. | California, USA | Physical water purification | |
14 | Calera Corporation | California, USA | Beneficial use of waste | |
15 | PAX Water | San Rafael, CA | Disinfection/Water quality | |
16 | Derceto, Inc. | California, USA | Water treatment plant management software | |
17 | Aquaporin A/S | Copenhagen, Denmark | Clean water solutions | |
18 | Verdant Power, Inc. | New York, USA | Water as energy | |
19 | 7-Technologies | Copenhagen, Denmark | Smart water management | |
20 | Agua Via Ltd | California, USA | Water purification/Nanotech | |
21 | CheckLight | Qiryat Tivon, Israel | Water monitoring | |
22 | Epuramat S.A. | Contern, Luxembourg | Waste processing/beneficial waste harvesting | |
23 | Stonybrook Purification | New York, USA | Water purification/Nanotech | |
24 | Aquavive Technologies Inc. | British Columbia, Canada | Onsite waste water treatment/Beneficial waste harvesting | |
25 | Xeros Ltd | Leeds, UK | Water efficient laundry machine | |
26 | EnviroTower, Inc. | Ontario, Canada | Cooling tower optimization | |
27 | Green Wireless Systems, Inc. | California, USA | Moisture sensor/Automated irrigation | |
28 | Aquarius Technologies, Inc. | Wisconsin, USA | Waste processing/Sludge minimization | |
29 | Clean Water Technology, Inc. | California, USA | Onsite waste water treatment/Beneficial waste harvesting | |
30 | ATD Waste Systems, Inc. | British Columbia, Canada | Onsite waste water treatment/Beneficial waste harvesting | |
31 | Ionic Water Technologies, Inc. | Nevada, USA | Onsite waste water treatment/Beneficial waste harvesting | |
32 | Crystal Clear Technologies, Inc. | California, USA | Water purification/Nanotech | |
33 | Cyber-Rain, Inc. | California, USA | Moisture sensor/Automated irrigation | |
34 | American Micro Detection Systems, Inc. | California, USA | Water monitoring | |
35 | Grundfos BioBooster A/S | Bjerringbro, Denmark | Onsite waste water treatment | |
36 | ProWell Technologies Ltd | Tel Aviv, Israel | Groundwater management/Pump optimization | |
37 | Green World Solutions | California, USA | GIS-based water distribution software/Automated irrigation | |
38 | Ocean Pacific Technologies | California, USA | Pump optimization/Energy recovery | |
39 | HaloSource, Inc. | Washington, USA | Disinfection | |
40 | Ioteq IP Pty Ltd | Sydney, Australia | Disinfection/Water purification | |
41 | GO2 Water | California, USA | Wastewater solutions | |
42 | 349Q | Massachusetts, USA | Disinfection | |
43 | Aqua Sciences, Inc. | Florida, USA | Water harvesting | |
44 | Electrolytic Ozone, Inc. | Massachusetts, USA | Disinfection/Ozonation | |
45 | Falcon Waterfree Technologies, LLC | California, USA | Waterless urinal | |
46 | Air Water Treatment | Barcelona, Spain | Waste minimization | |
47 | Oberon FMR, Inc. | Colorado, USA | Onsite wastewater treatment/Beneficial waste harvesting | |
48 | Lesico CleanTech | Holon, Israel | Waste minimization | |
49 | BioPetroClean, Inc. | New York, USA | Onsite waste water treatment/Beneficial waste harvesting | |
50 | GeoPure Water Technologies, LLC | Texas, USA | Produced water |
Leading-edge Innovation from Established Water Companies
In addition to selecting the leading early-stage companies in advanced high technology, The Artemis Project Water Top 50 Competition selected five established water-related companies to honor for pioneering technologies that they are developing in-house.
Eka Systems, Inc. | Maryland, USA | Advanced water meter |
Energy Recovery, Inc. | California, USA | Pump optimization/Energy recovery |
IDE Technologies, Ltd. | Kadima, Israel | Water purification/Waste minimization |
Netafim USA | California, USA | Automated irrigation/Drip irrigation |
Schlumberger Water Services | Paris, France | Groundwater management |
do you believe every thing you read
Bottling Lake Michigan water worth exploring, new commissioner says
But says city has no plans to privatize water system
Mayor Daley has “no plans” to privatize Chicago’s water system, but bottling and selling the city’s “exceptional” tap water is worth exploring, newly-appointed Water Management Commissioner Tom Powers said today.
“The quality of the water that the department puts out is exceptional. In some cases, it’s better than bottled water,” Powers said after his City Council confirmation hearing.
Asked if Chicago might someday bottle and sell Lake Michigan water, Powers said, “As far as how you go about doing that — I don’t know how practical that is. It’s something you’d have to look at.”
After holding the line on taxes in 2010 by draining reserves generated by the $1.15 billion deal that privatized Chicago parking meters, Daley declared his intention to continue the Great Chicago sell-off.
Speculation has centered on privatizing all or parts of Chicago’s water system, including the Jardine and South filtration plants, city pumping stations, water billing functions or just the sewer system.
Some insiders believe Daley might have appointed Powers with marching orders to move the department at the center of the Hired Truck and city hiring scandals more aggressively toward privatization.
After the City Council’s Budget Committee approved his appointment, Powers tried his best to shoot down the privatization talk.
“The people on the street and the people behind the desks at the Department of Water Management do an outstanding job. . . . There are no plans to privatize any of those functions,” Powers said.
Aldermen who questioned Powers today had more mundane concerns than privatization.
They were focused on quicker restoration of Chicago streets after sewer, water and transportation projects are completed.
“I don’t think a restoration job should sit for two years,” said Ald. Ariel Reboyras (30th).
“I’ve got some e-mails I’m gonna hand you at the end of this meeting about [projects] that have been a year-and-a-half and not restored,” said Ald. Ginger Rugai (19th).
Ald. Tom Tunney (44th) said he hopes Powers will “accelerate coordination” between construction crews from the Departments of Transportation and Water Management after Powers spent the last 14 years at CDOT.
“The constituent just knows it’s the city. They don’t care who [tore up the street]. It needs to be coordinated. When someone does half of a job in the taxpayer’s mind because it’s not their work or it wasn’t their cut, we’ve really got to figure out how to streamline that,” Tunney said.
Related Blog PostsFrom MapAWatt Blog
From MapAWatt Blog
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Manufacturing facilities significant source of pharmaceuticals in water | |
Monday, June 07, 2010 | |
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WASHINGTON — A new study by the US Geological Survey (USGS) conducted in cooperation with the State of New York indicated that pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities can be a significant source of pharmaceuticals to surface waters, according to a press release. The findings were published in the American Chemical Society’s journal Environmental Science and Technology. Outflow from two wastewater treatment plants in New York that receive more than 20 percent of their wastewater from pharmaceutical facilities had concentrations of pharmaceuticals that were 10 to 1000 times higher than outflows from 24 plants nationwide that do not receive wastewater from pharmaceutical manufacturers, the release stated. “This is the first study in the U.S. to identify pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities as a significant source of pharmaceuticals to the environment,” said Matthew C. Larsen, USGS Associate Director for Water. “The USGS is working with water utilities to evaluate alternative water treatment technologies with the goal of reducing the release of pharmaceuticals and other emerging contaminants to the environment.” This study is part of a long-term effort to determine the fate and effects of chemicals of emerging environmental concern and to provide water-resource managers with objective information that assists in the development of effective water management practices, according to the release. To read the entire article, click here. For related information, click here. |
here it comes your water softner next water tect
California utility considering salt-based water softener ban | |
Monday, June 07, 2010 | |
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CHINO, CALIF. — The Inland Empire Utilities Agency (IEUA) in Chino, Calif., is working on a plan to curb the use of salt-based water softeners in its service area, the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin reported. The agency is considering a ban on the installation of any new salt-based softeners and may offer existing users incentives, such as rebates, to switch to salt-free systems, the article stated. According to IEUA officials, residential water softeners contribute 10 percent of all salt in the sewer system. “It’s a big water quality problem especially for places like the Chino Basin where we depend upon our groundwater and recycled water supplies to meet our water needs,” said John Anderson, an IEUA board member. But according to Eric Rosenthal, senior vice president of marketing for Culligan, banning salt-based water softeners will lead to other problems, the article stated. “You are trading [salinity] with increased use of detergents and energy waste,” said Rosenthal. “It’s not a free ride.” As another possible solution, IEUA is looking into off-site regeneration, in which tanks are switched out each month at a customer’s home and then regenerated at the company’s plant. The residual is then dumped into a brine line, which has no contact with the sewer system, according to the story. To read the entire article, click here. For related information, click here. |
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
so it's the farms what about the houses around the lakes that fertilize and all the storm sewers
Algal bloom fouls drinking water in Indianapolis | |
Monday, May 03, 2010 | |
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INDIANAPOLIS — An early algal bloom has fouled the drinking water in up to a million homes in Indianapolis and its suburbs, The Republic reported. Compounds released by the blue-green algae have inundated the city’s water treatment plants, imparting an unpleasant, musty flavor and smell to tap water, according to the story. Officials said the musty flavor and odor will likely persist until chemicals kill the algae, the article stated. Jeff Robinson, Indiana-American Water Co.’s director of water quality, said the reservoir’s watershed is filled with farms, which can be a major source of nutrients that fuel algal blooms. “What we’re seeing is a combination of nutrients, the warmth and sunlight — it’s created a proliferation of blue-green algae,” said Robinson. The utility is applying activated charcoal at its treatment plant and is using carbon filters to reduce the water’s foul smell and taste, according to the report. To read the entire article, click here. For related information, click here. |