Good Water

IF 0.7 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q4 ENGINEERING, CIVIL
Kenneth L. Mercer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In my December 2024 column, I outlined the paradigms of clean and safe water—clean enough to swim in, safe enough to drink—but it's common to see these terms used together as clean, safe drinking water. As a water wonk, the combination of clean and safe bothers me, but I think I understand the intent, because while centered on human health and fire protection, drinking water is also a consumer good, and communities expect more than safe water—they expect to enjoy the product they pay for.

Reddish-brown tap water may be nontoxic, but it stains fixtures and clothing in the washer—and it looks bad. Consumers expect that their local drinking water won’t leave stains on their clothes, fixtures, and water-using appliances, but just clean water isn’t good enough. Drinking water may be safe to drink and useful for cleaning, but if it smells and tastes bad, there's a major problem because our water, just like other consumer products, is judged on its aesthetics.

Ideally, drinking water is clear, with no distinct odors, no lingering aftertaste, and no mouth-feel sensations. Yet many local drinking water supplies can have an odor, taste, or color (seasonal or otherwise) that doesn’t affect the safety of the water but that degrades its quality—this includes chlorine or metallic tastes, along with earthy odors and sewer smells. For utilities, nothing brings in complaints quicker than discolored, bad-tasting, or foul-smelling water.

Circling back, what adjective should water professionals consider instead of “clean?” There are studies in which “pure” tests well, but the chemistry nerd in me won’t accept “pure” for anything less than 100%. However, if the word resonates with you and your community, use it! Arguments about terminology promote larger discussions about water in our society, and that's a good thing. And “good” is the term I recommend using—good, safe drinking water. Good water is trusted water—it looks good, tastes good, and feels good. If someone tells you the water in an area is no good, you have a sense of what that means.

Consumers generally trust water utilities to keep them informed about the safety and quality of their water, but the list of water's ingredients as summarized by Consumer Confidence Reports shouldn’t be the only line of regular communication. The public is part of the team, and strengthening its trust requires drinking water system owners and operators to regularly communicate with their communities, and especially about any challenges in the safety or quality of their drinking water.

Please share your insights with the water industry on how make good, safe water even better by publishing in Journal AWWA; contact me with your ideas at [email protected].

好水
在我2024年12月的专栏中,我概述了清洁和安全的水的范例——干净到可以游泳,安全到可以饮用——但通常把这些术语放在一起使用是干净、安全的饮用水。作为一名水务工作者,清洁和安全的结合让我感到困扰,但我想我理解其中的意图,因为饮用水虽然以人类健康和消防为中心,但也是一种消费品,社区期望的不仅仅是安全的水——他们希望享受他们花钱购买的产品。红褐色的自来水可能是无毒的,但它会弄脏洗衣机里的固定装置和衣服——看起来很糟糕。消费者希望当地的饮用水不会在他们的衣服、固定装置和用水器具上留下污渍,但仅仅是干净的水是不够的。饮用水可能是安全的,可以用来清洁,但如果它闻起来和尝起来不好,那就有一个大问题了,因为我们的水,就像其他消费品一样,是根据它的美学来判断的。理想情况下,饮用水是清澈的,没有明显的气味,没有挥之不去的余味,没有口感。然而,许多当地的饮用水供应可能有一种气味、味道或颜色(季节性或其他),这些气味、味道或颜色不会影响水的安全,但会降低水的质量——包括氯味或金属味,以及泥土味和下水道味。对于公用事业公司来说,没有什么比变色、变质或恶臭的水更能引起投诉了。再回过头来,水务专业人士应该用什么形容词来代替“干净”?在一些研究中,“纯”的测试结果很好,但我这个化学书呆子不会接受任何低于100%的“纯”。然而,如果这个词与你和你的社区产生共鸣,那就使用它吧!关于术语的争论促进了我们社会对水的广泛讨论,这是一件好事。“好”是我推荐使用的术语——好的、安全的饮用水。好水是值得信赖的水——它看起来很好,味道很好,感觉也很好。如果有人告诉你某个地区的水不好,你就会知道那是什么意思。消费者通常相信水务公司会让他们了解水的安全和质量,但消费者信心报告总结的水成分清单不应该是唯一的常规沟通渠道。公众是团队的一部分,加强公众的信任需要饮用水系统所有者和运营商定期与社区沟通,特别是关于饮用水安全和质量方面的任何挑战。请在AWWA杂志上发表文章,与水行业分享您对如何使优质、安全的水变得更好的见解;请发邮件[email protected]与我联系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
28.60%
发文量
179
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal AWWA serves as the voice of the water industry and is an authoritative source of information for water professionals and the communities they serve. Journal AWWA provides an international forum for the industry’s thought and practice leaders to share their perspectives and experiences with the goal of continuous improvement of all water systems. Journal AWWA publishes articles about the water industry’s innovations, trends, controversies, and challenges, covering subjects such as public works planning, infrastructure management, human health, environmental protection, finance, and law. Journal AWWA will continue its long history of publishing in-depth and innovative articles on protecting the safety of our water, the reliability and resilience of our water systems, and the health of our environment and communities.
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