Drinking Water Temperature around the Globe: Understanding, Policies, Challenges and Opportunities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. Survey
2.2. Literature Review
3. Results—Drinking Water Temperature from Source to Tap
3.1. Monitoring Practices
3.2. Drinking Water Temperature at The Source
3.3. Drinking Water Temperature in the Transport and Distribution System
3.4. Drinking Water Temperature in the Domestic Drinking Water Installation and at the Tap
3.5. Drinking Water from Source to Tap
3.6. Consequences of Higher Temperatures and Legislation
4. Challenges and Opportunities
4.1. Trends
4.2. Knowledge Gaps and Future Research
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Country | Source | Water Treatment Plant | At the Customer |
---|---|---|---|
Colombia a | 13–28 °C | 16–26 °C | 25–28 °C |
Czech Republic | GW: 6–15 °C b | SW: 4–11 °C c | MW: 2–24 °C d |
France | GW: 12 °C e | RDT: 10 <25 °C f | |
Italy | 6–15°C g | ||
Netherlands h | SW: 2–23 °C GW: 12–13°C | RDT: 4–25 °C | |
Serbia | 9–16 °C i SW: 6–27 °C j GW: 12–18 °C j | 5–18 °C i | |
South Africa | 10–28 °C k | 20.5–24.5 °C l | |
Spain | 10–29 °C m | ||
United Kingdom | SW: 1–21°C n | SW: 2–26 °C o GW: 10–18 °C o MW: 2–23 °C o SW: 3–24 °C p GW: 11–12 °C p MW: 6–22 °C p | SW: 3–25 °C o GW: 4–27 °C o MW: 4–26 °C o |
Country | Legal Standard for Drinking Water Temperature | Legal Standard for Legionella |
---|---|---|
Colombia | No legal standard | No legal standard |
Czech Republic | Decree No. 252/2004 Coll. Decree laying down hygiene requirements for drinking and hot water and frequency and scope of drinking water control. The recommended temperature of drinking water at the customer‘s tap is between 8 and 12 °C. | Decree No. 252/2004 Coll. Decree laying down hygiene requirements for drinking and hot water and frequency and scope of drinking water control. This indicator is only set for hot water, where the limit of 100 HTP/100 mL is mandatory. This is the limit that applies to health and accommodation facilities, hot water supplied to showers of artificial or natural pools and drinking water used for hot water production; for other buildings, it is the recommended value to be sought through technical measures. The limit 0 HTP/100 mL as the highest limit value applies to wards of hospitals where immunocompromised patients are located |
France | The temperature at the consumer’s tap should be less than 25 °C (decree from 11 January 2017) in metropolitan France. | For water heating systems of public premises (hospital, hostel, camping, retreat houses, etc.) and cooling towers there is a regulation for environmental monitoring of Legionella. Since 1 August 2012, monitoring has been based on culture methods (as per Standard NF T90-431 “Detection and enumeration of Legionella spp. and of Legionella pneumophila by culture in agar media”. However, there are several detection and enumeration methods for Legionella that are under development or that are currently in use to greater or lesser extents. Since 1 January 2012, monitoring is mandatory on hot water networks for establishments receiving the public ANSES (French Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health & Safety). |
Italy | No legal standard. However, it is recommended that temperature should range between 12 °C and 25 °C (Rapporti ISTISAN 97/9, Istituto Superiore della Sanità) | National guidelines from Conferenza Stato-Regioni del 07 maggio 2015. Drinking water temperature must be controlled to be outside of the critical range 20–50 °C to prevent Legionella infections. |
Netherlands | The Dutch Drinking Water Directive contains a maximum temperature limit of 25 °C at the tap [22]. | National guidelines concerning prevention of Legionella infections that state the drinking water temperature in a building may not exceed 25 °C, and hot water temperatures must be at least 55 °C [41]. |
Serbia | Drinking water quality standards (Official gazette of FRYu, No. 42/98 and 44/99, Official gazette of RS No. 28/19), temperature at the consumer is not set, but there is a requirement that it shall not be higher than the temperature at the source. | No standards |
Spain | No standards | There are two laws that establish some parameters related to Legionella: (a) Royal Decree 140/2003 of February 7th [42] establishing the sanitary criteria for quality of water for human consumption. In this law, there is no mention to temperature nor Legionella at all, but fixes all the values applied to suitable drinking water. It also fixes that sampling protocols for every water company. (b) Royal Decree 865/2003, of 4 July [43] establishes hygienic-sanitary criteria for the prevention and control of Legionnaires’ disease. The aim of this law consists of preventing and controlling legionellosis by adopting hygienic and sanitary measures in those facilities where Legionella can proliferate and spread. In this sense, it focuses on hot water facilities inside the buildings. The Building Technical Standards (CTE from its initials in Spanish) for the design of plumbing installations inside buildings CTE-DB H4 are based on the aforementioned law. There is a nonmandatory recommendation for drinking water to be under 20 °C where weather conditions allow. |
South Africa | No standards | No standards around the presence of Legionella in drinking water. The National Institute for Communicable Diseases [44] recommends: “The proper design, maintenance and temperature of potable water systems are the most important method for preventing the amplification of Legionella. Hot water should be stored above 60 °C and delivered to taps above 50 °C. Cold water should be stored below 20 °C, and dead legs or low flow areas eliminated.” Legionnaires disease is a notifiable health condition (compulsory notification) in South Africa. |
United Kingdom | No standards. The Water Fittings Regulations Guidance book advises to try and keep water supplied to 20 °C as a maximum. | Health and Safety England (HSE) have produced a document which is an “Approved Code of Practice” regarding controlling Legionella in water systems. The risk assessment, prevention and control of Legionella falls under the 1974 Health and Safety at Work Act (HSWA) and a framework for this assessment is covered by the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations 2002 (COSHH) [45]. Guidelines suggest control measures of:
|
Aspect | Location | Reference |
---|---|---|
Changes in bacterial dynamics | Network | [19,54,55,56] |
Increased chlorine decay | Network | [15,19,57] |
Increased discolouration risk | Network/tap | [19,52,53,58] |
L. pneumophila and opportunistic pathogens | [59] | |
Seasonal shifts in bacterial communities | Effluents of treatment utilities | [60] |
Trihalomethanes propagation in DWDS | Network | [61] |
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Agudelo-Vera, C.; Avvedimento, S.; Boxall, J.; Creaco, E.; de Kater, H.; Di Nardo, A.; Djukic, A.; Douterelo, I.; Fish, K.E.; Iglesias Rey, P.L.; et al. Drinking Water Temperature around the Globe: Understanding, Policies, Challenges and Opportunities. Water 2020, 12, 1049. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12041049
Agudelo-Vera C, Avvedimento S, Boxall J, Creaco E, de Kater H, Di Nardo A, Djukic A, Douterelo I, Fish KE, Iglesias Rey PL, et al. Drinking Water Temperature around the Globe: Understanding, Policies, Challenges and Opportunities. Water. 2020; 12(4):1049. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12041049
Chicago/Turabian StyleAgudelo-Vera, Claudia, Stefania Avvedimento, Joby Boxall, Enrico Creaco, Henk de Kater, Armando Di Nardo, Aleksandar Djukic, Isabel Douterelo, Katherine E. Fish, Pedro L. Iglesias Rey, and et al. 2020. "Drinking Water Temperature around the Globe: Understanding, Policies, Challenges and Opportunities" Water 12, no. 4: 1049. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12041049