New Standard Verifies Removal of Cryptosporidium from Public Drinking Water

March 19, 2015
NSF/ANSI 419: Public Drinking Water Equipment Performance – Filtration evaluates the performance of municipal water filtration technologies in removing Cryptosporidium

Global public health organization NSF Intl. has published the first consensus-based American National Standard to evaluate the performance of municipal water filtration technologies in removing Cryptosporidium from public drinking water supplies. The new standard—NSF/ANSI 419: Public Drinking Water Equipment Performance – Filtration—incorporates state and federal regulatory requirements, assisting state regulators in verifying compliance while reducing time and costs for manufacturers by streamlining the testing process.

Products from Dow Chemical Co., Hydranautics, Hyflux Ltd., Inge GmbH and Qua Group LLC are the first to earn certification to NSF/ANSI 419. Several other water filtration technologies are currently undergoing the testing and certification process.

Municipal water treatment plants that use surface waters such as lakes, rivers and streams as a source of public drinking water are required to filter out microorganisms and bacteria such as Cryptosporidium unless exempted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). To ensure Cryptosporidium is effectively removed from public drinking water, the EPA created the Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule (LT2), which applies to all public water systems that use surface water or ground water that is under the direct influence of surface water.

The NSF/ANSI 419 standard incorporates the EPA LT2 Rule as well as other federal and state requirements such as certification to NSF/ANSI 61: Drinking Water System Components – Health Effects, which sets contaminant limits for components that come into contact with drinking water such as plumbing components and pipes. By incorporating all regulatory requirements into one standard, NSF Intl. is able to streamline the testing and certification process for these technologies while simplifying the purchasing process for municipal water treatment facilities.

 “Water treatment technologies certified to the NSF/ANSI 419 standard have been tested to verify they effectively remove Cryptosporidium in drinking water, which is known to cause gastrointestinal illness. Instead of every state drinking water agency having to review each validation report for each product, state regulators can now verify compliance through the official listings found on NSF’s website,” said Clif McLellan, vice president of NSF Intl.’s Global Water Div.

NSF Intl. developed the NSF/ANSI 419 standard utilizing nearly two decades of experience managing EPA’s Environmental Technology Verification Drinking Water Systems Center with balanced input from industry, regulatory and end-user groups. The standard covers microfiltration, ultrafiltration and nanofiltration systems as well as bag and cartridge filtration systems used in the treatment or production of public drinking water.

Source: NSF Intl.

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