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National Drinking Water Contaminant Data

EPA must first make determinations about which contaminants to regulate. These determinations are based on health risks and the likelihood that the contaminant occurs in public water systems at levels of concern. The National Drinking Water Contaminant Candidate List (CCL), published March 2, 1998, lists contaminants that (1) are not already regulated under SDWA (2) may have adverse health effects (3) are known or anticipated to occur in public water systems and (4) may require regulations under SDWA. Contaminants on the CCL are divided into priorities for regulation, health research and occurrence data collection. [Pg.12]

Overall there appears to be considerable uniformity in the concentration of di- -butyl phthalate in the surface waters of the United States, if locally contaminated areas are excluded. The National Drinking Water Contaminant Occurrence Database (NDOD), which contains data from ambient water samples, lists... [Pg.119]

SDWA has provisions that provide for the collection, organization and sharing of occurrence data on contaminants of potential concern. The National Drinking Water... [Pg.15]

The ability to provide accurate and reliable data is central to the role of analytical chemists, not only in areas like the development and manufacture of drugs, food control or drinking water analysis, but also in the field of environmental chemistry, where there is an increasing need for certified laboratories (ISO 9000 standards). The quality of analytical data is a key factor in successfully identifying and monitoring contamination of environmental compartments. In this context, a large collection of methods applied to the routine analysis of prime environmental pollutants has been developed and validated, and adapted in nationally or internationally harmonised protocols (DIN, EPA). Information on method performance generally provides data on specificity, accuracy, precision (repeatability and reproducibility), limit of detection, sensitivity, applicability and practicability, as appropriate. [Pg.538]

Composite data from the Comprehensive Emergency Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) monitoring program indicate that benzene was detected at a frequency of 11.2% in groundwater in the vicinity of 178 inactive hazardous waste disposal sites (Plumb 1987). Data from a 1980 national survey by the Council on Environmental Quality on groundwater and surface water contamination showed benzene concentrations in contaminated drinking water wells in New York, New... [Pg.304]


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Contaminants drinking water

Drinking water

Drinking water contaminated

Drinking-water contamination

National Drinking Water

National Drinking Water Contaminant Data Base

Water contaminants

Water contaminated

Water contaminates

Water contamination

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