Potential contaminants in rainwater after a bushfire

2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 183
Author(s):  
Kirstin E. Ross, PhD ◽  
Harriet Whiley, PhD ◽  
Emmanuel Chubaka, MEnvSci, PhD Candidate ◽  
Malinda Steenkamp, PhD ◽  
Paul Arbon, PhD

Using roof harvested rainwater held in domestic rainwater tanks is a common practice in Australia, particularly in rural areas. This rainwater might become contaminated with ash and other contaminants during or after a bushfire. Current advice from Australian Health Departments can include the recommendation that landholders drain their tanks after a bushfire, which can cause additional distress to landholders who have already been through a traumatic event. This study created artificially contaminated water, spiked with chemicals likely to be associated with bushfires, including chromated copper arsenate-treated timber ash and firefighting foam to determine the possibility of contamination. The authors also tested two readily available filter systems and found that they removed some but not all contaminants. The artificially created contaminated water fell within guidelines for nonpotable uses such as irrigation and stock watering. This suggests that advice to landholders should be that tank water following a bushfire is likely to be safe for use for purposes apart from drinking. Landholders should be encouraged to retain and use their water for recovery purposes, but not for potable use.

2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (s1) ◽  
pp. s42-s42
Author(s):  
Malinda Steenkamp ◽  
Kirstin Ross ◽  
Harriet Whiley ◽  
Emmanuel Chubaka ◽  
Paul Arbon

Introduction:Roof-harvested rainwater held in domestic tanks is used for a variety of purposes in Australia, including drinking and irrigation. There is limited evidence about the quality of rainwater after bushfires. Current health guidelines can be interpreted that landholders need to drain their rainwater tanks to avoid the risk of contamination. Anecdotal reports indicate that following such advice caused additional distress to landowners affected by bushfires in South Australia. Sustainable water management is important for future resilience and more evidence on water quality following bushfires is needed.Aim:This project investigated whether there is contamination of roof-harvested rainwater after bushfires, and if so, whether such water was safe for various purposes.Methods:In 2017 we tested artificially contaminated water spiked with chemicals associated with bushfires (chromated copper arsenate-treated ash and firefighting foam) and conducted a pilot field study using two purposely built roofs during a pre-fire season burn off. A field validation is planned for the summer of 2018/19 (December 2018 - March 2019), i.e., we plan to obtain 200 samples from 50 households affected by bushfire – two samples immediately after the fire event and another two after the first rain.Results:The artificially created contaminated water fell within guidelines for non-potable uses such as irrigation and stock watering, but was found unsuitable for drinking even after being filtered through two commercially available water filtration systems. We also plan to present results from our field study of 50 households.Discussion:Contaminant concentrations, even in artificially spiked water samples, are low and acceptable for non-potable uses. Bottled water should be used for drinking. Landholders should be encouraged to use their water for recovery purposes. Such advice may assist with decreasing the stress experienced by affected landholders and help with recovery efforts through the availability of a greater body of water.


2011 ◽  
Vol 281 ◽  
pp. 263-266
Author(s):  
Zhen Hua Liu

Safe drinking water in rural areas in china was worried about, and was very urgent.Table 2 shows that more than 320 million people living in rural areas drank unhealthy water in 2004, there were 90.84 million rural residents in 2004 drinking contaminated water in china. Contaminated water became the main reason of unsafe drinking water in rural areas,coming from industrial pollution and agricultural pollution. At the same time, emergency exacerbating crisis of rural drinking water, especially rising incidents of industrial pollution. china plans to provide safe drinking water for rural residents in rural areas, through financial investment and policy support, and improves rural safe drinking water system.


Author(s):  
Tiago Vinicius Silva Athaydes ◽  
Jefferson de Queiroz Crispim ◽  
Mauro Parolin

Sanitation in rural areas in Brazil is still very precarious, with deficits greater than in urban areas. In this sense, the central objective of this research is to evaluate the role of the Municipal Surveillance in the management of water quality in rural properties in the Midwestern region of Paraná, covering the beginning of the monitoring of water quality, the relationship of the Consolidation Ordinance No. 5 of 2017 of the Ministry of Health regarding the choices of parameters on potability indices in relation to the parameters analyzed in the Surveillance, the presence of outbreaks due to diseases arising from the consumption of contaminated water, the demand by residents and the partners who contribute to the realization of these activities. The data were obtained through the application of a semi-structured questionnaire, through the 11th Health Regional Office of Campo Mourão. It was presented that the municipalities have acted in the monitoring of water quality in an uneven way at the beginning of the activities, following the parameters of the Ordinance. The municipalities had demands and demands from residents and counted on the 11th Health Regional Office as the main partner in the monitoring support. Only Iretama presented an outbreak due to the consumption of contaminated water.


2010 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-3 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.F.M. Sarwar ◽  
SK. Akhtar Ahmad ◽  
Manzurul Haque Khan ◽  
M.H. Selim Ullah Sayed ◽  
Md. Humayun Kabir

This cross-sectional study was carried out in some selected arsenic contaminated rural areas of Bangladesh to determine any clinical changes in oral cavity, among the arsenic exposed population through drinking water. Total 600 respondents (200 arsenicosis patients, 200 non-patients but having the history of taking arsenic contaminated water and another 200 arsenic non-exposed). 75.5% of arsenicosis patients had swelled vallate papillae whereas only 44.5% and 8.5% in case of arsenic exposure and non-exposure subjects respectively. The differences were found statistically significant (p<0.001). This study suggests that there is a tendency of developing swelled vallate papillae among the arsenic exposed population. Online: 10 July 2010DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/bmrcb.v36i1.4479Bangladesh Med Res Counc Bull 2010; 36: 1-3


2021 ◽  
Vol 107 ◽  
pp. 55-63
Author(s):  
Kebone Revival Mofokeng ◽  
Muhammad Falalu Yahaya ◽  
Joshua Osuigwe Madu ◽  
Florence Nkiruka Chukwudi ◽  
Samuel Ojo ◽  
...  

Some organic pollutants change the color, smell, and other characteristics of water leaving it undesirable for use. However, other organic pollutants do not change the physical properties of the water, yet, they make the water non-useful. This study was carried out to determine the characteristics of petroleum contaminated water and how it can be purified using economical filters for possible reuse in rural areas of the Niger Delta, of Nigeria. The filters were made from rice husk ash, and white clay, as main materials, while calcium carbonate and poly (propylene carbonate) were used as binders and pore former. The water samples were tested for conductivity, turbidity, pH, heavy metals, and total hydrocarbon contents. The results showed a significant decrease in the amount of petroleum/organic pollutants present in the water sample before purification. The filter candle made using poly (propylene carbonate) as a binder was found to be the most efficient in removing organic pollutants, but it was not very effective in the removal of heavy metals and also, the pH of the filtrate became more acidic. Filtrates from other filters, however, had pH in an acceptable range. Dodecanoic acid and hexadecanoic acid were found to be removed from the polluted water using the filters.


2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 479-485 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Kus ◽  
Jaya Kandasamy ◽  
S. Vigneswaran ◽  
H. K. Shon ◽  
G. Moody

The characterisation of rainwater in metropolitan Sydney and in rural New South Wales was undertaken. The results showed that factors such as the lack of vehicular traffic, air pollution and urban contamination meant that rural rainwater water quality was better. The rain water collected in both metropolitan and rural areas generally complied with the 2004 Australian Drinking Water Guidelines except for parameters such as the pH in both the metropolitan and rural rainwater tanks and the turbidity, and lead levels from the metropolitan tanks. This paper also reports the results of a laboratory and a pilot scale study with a deep bed filter (granular activated carbon, GAC) and microfiltration (MF) hollow fibre membrane filter system used to treat raw rainwater collected from a metropolitan rainwater tank. The results of the laboratory experiment and pilot scale systems focus on the non-compliant parameters of the sampling program, i.e. turbidity, lead and dissolved organic carbon (DOC). It was found that rainwater treated by the GAC filter removed the majority of the turbidity and organic substances. The treatment system reduced the concentration of turbidity, lead and DOC to below the Australian Drinking Water Guidelines limits. The pilot plant experiment demonstrated that a GAC filter system and gravity driven membrane could result in low cost and low maintenance operation.


2004 ◽  
Vol 70 (2) ◽  
pp. 1145-1151 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurie F. Caslake ◽  
Daniel J. Connolly ◽  
Vilas Menon ◽  
Catriona M. Duncanson ◽  
Ricardo Rojas ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Contaminated water causes an estimated 6 to 60 billion cases of gastrointestinal illness annually. The majority of these cases occur in rural areas of developing nations where the water supply remains polluted and adequate sanitation is unavailable. A portable, low-cost, and low-maintenance solar unit to disinfect unpotable water has been designed and tested. The solar disinfection unit was tested with both river water and partially processed water from two wastewater treatment plants. In less than 30 min in midday sunlight, the unit eradicated more than 4 log10 U (99.99%) of bacteria contained in highly contaminated water samples. The solar disinfection unit has been field tested by Centro Panamericano de Ingenieria Sanitaria y Ciencias del Ambiente in Lima, Peru. At moderate light intensity, the solar disinfection unit was capable of reducing the bacterial load in a controlled contaminated water sample by 4 log10 U and disinfected approximately 1 liter of water in 30 min.


2011 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Md Sarwar Jahan ◽  
Afif Ul-Minhaz

Arsenic is one of the important chemical water pollutants and number of arsenicosis patient in Bangladesh is remarkable. This cross-sectional study was done in several rural localities of Chapai Nawabganj with the view to find out the preventive measures adopted by the rural people to alleviate health problems of consuming arsenic contaminated ground water, and to determine the prevalence of chronic arsenicosis along with the proportion of people still consuming arsenic contaminated drinking water. The study areas were selected purposively and data were collected by a pre-tested questionnaire from 384 rural people sampled by systematic random sampling technique. Majority of the respondents were male. Among them 81.25% knew the arsenic as a pollutant of ground water and 79.17% had knowledge about the health problems due to it. Among the respondents, 83.33% were using arsenic contaminated water, in them only 97 (30.31%) had adopted preventive measures. Eighteen (4.69%) arsenicosis patients were found in the studied houses. A large section of people had knowledge about arsenic and its health problems. In rural areas many households were using arsenic contaminated water without getting any preventive measures. The number of arsenicosis patients is also remarkable. Provision of availability of arsenic free safe water and appropriate technology to make water arsenic free in that area is essential. Health education program should be initiated to encourage people about these. It also needs general education and financial conditional improvement.   doi: 10.3329/taj.v19i1.3160 TAJ 2006; 19(1): 1-9  


2000 ◽  
Vol 34 (5) ◽  
pp. 784-788 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandra B. Ribeiro ◽  
Eduardo P. Mateus ◽  
Lisbeth M. Ottosen ◽  
Gregers Bech-Nielsen

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