The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is funding four new research projects into a fundamental drinking-water challenge: how to make sure water stays clean of illness-causing microbes without accidentally creating toxic chemicals.
The chemicals are called disinfection byproducts, and have been a known problem for years. Some 295 million people drink water where one type of byproduct has been detected at levels above the Environmental Working Group's suggested health guidelines, according to the advocacy group's drinking water database.
Part of the problem comes from a delicate balance in the water system. Many utilities add extra disinfectant at their treatment plants so that the water stays clean as it travels through water towers, water mains, service lines and, ultimately, to peoples' homes.
Add too little of the common disinfectants chlorine, chloramines or ozone, and pathogens like the bacteria Legionella can sneak into the system, researchers said. Add too much of these, and potentially dangerous disinfection byproducts can form.
A few of the byproducts already have drinking water limits enforced by the EPA. But many exist that are not regulated, and scientists are now racing to figure out exactly how big a problem they are — and how we can stop them from coming out of people's taps.
"Hopefully, we can make recommendations for what U.S. water utilities [should use to disinfect], depending maybe on the region they're in, the types of water sources that they are using," said Raymond Hozalski, an environmental engineer at the University of Minnesota.
His research team and three others received a combined $8.5 million this summer from the EPA to study what the right disinfection mix will look like.
It's not entirely clear why the chemicals created by disinfection are gaining new attention from the EPA now. The agency did not respond to a request for comment.