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THM-100™ Yields Excellent Results

In a newly released Water Research Foundation (WRF) report, TTHM concentration results from the THM-100™ analyzer yielded excellent results. Throughout the duration of the demonstration testing, results obtained from the AMS THM-100™ analyzer were within ± 10% of laboratory results. In addition to the TTHM concentrations, the individual THM species concentrations also matched very well between the AMS instrument and the laboratory.

Evaluation of the field TTHM analytical instruments demonstrated that these instruments are easy to install and operate, can generate TTHM results quickly, and most importantly accurate and precise.

WRF Report Reducing Volatile Disinfection By-Products in Treated Drinking Water Using Aeration Technologies (Report #4441) © 2015 Water Research Foundation.

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Online Water Quality Instruments Poised for Growth

Real-time data and analytical information from online instruments help utilities comply with water quality regulations. The complete article detailing how online water quality instruments are poised for growth was published in the March/April 2015 issue of World Water. 

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PAX Water Installs In-Tank Aeration at San Jose Water Co.

PAX Water Technologies and Aqua Metrology Systems unveiled the installation of an in-tank aeration system at San Jose Water Co. The system, installed by Utility Service Group, is being deployed in a 12 million-gal water storage tank to maintain high water quality during the drought.

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Large aerator installed in San Jose water storage to clear out possible carcinogens

An aeration system has been installed in San Jose Water Company’s 12 million-gallon water storage tank to keep dwindling water supplies free of contaminants and possible carcinogens. As organic matter in water sources, like drying rivers and lakes, is becoming more concentrated, according to the water company, there has been a growing concern about levels of trihalomethanes, or THMs.

 

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Stage 2 DBPR: Understanding, Managing THM Formation is Key for Compliance in Consecutive Systems

The buying and selling of treated water is common practice in the United States. Consecutive systems (CS) — public water systems that buy or receive some or all of their finished water from one or more wholesale systems (WS) — are responsible for serving nearly one-third of the water customers in the U.S… read the rest of the article by Rick Bacon the CEO of AMS.

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The Value of Instrumentation In The Water Industry

As long as instrumentation is selected, installed, commissioned, and maintained properly the data that it can give is invaluable to the water industry. However, there are a number of barriers in the way… read the rest of the article and a response from Rick Bacon the CEO of AMS.

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An Evaluation of the Accuracy of On-line THM Monitoring

This study shows that the proactive performance of AMS’s on-line THM-100 monitor is as accurate and precise as offline commercial laboratories. Allowing utilities to take immediate action to optimize the treatment process…

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Ensuring Safe Water in the Shadow of California’s Wildfire

 

The dangers caused by the enormous wildfire near California’s Yosemite National Park are clear to anyone who has seen the dramatic videos and photos. But a fire that has already razed an estimated 134,000 acres of land in nine days and is only twenty per cent under control holds an even greater long-term threat to the drinking water supply, as the Hetch Hetchy reservoir adjacent to Yosemite provides drinking water to over 2.6 million residents in the San Francisco Bay Area.

 

Ash falling into Hetch Hetchy significantly increases the amount of organic material in the source water and post disinfection, an increased level of carcinogenic Trihalomethanes (THMs) in the drinking water supply, while fire-suppression chemicals kill fish and contaminate the aquifer and increased solids clog filters.

 

Unfortunately, most consumers will not know whether their water is safe because of the time taken for laboratories to analyze drinking water samples from their city´s water utility by which time millions of gallons of water will have been already piped to them.

 

Fortunately, there is already a tried and tested solution installed in a number of Northern California water utilities, in the form of the THM-100, a fully automated system developed by Sunnyvale based Aqua Metrology Systems (AMS) that provides real-time data of the THM levels in a city’s water supply and can alert water utilities and consumers immediately if there is a problem so the water utility can take preventative actions. The Californian cities of Sunnyvale and Benicia are examples of the early adopters of this technology and their water quality readings can be seen at www.tthmalert.com

 

Rick Bacon, CEO of Aqua Metrology Systems, commented

“While the devastating Yosemite fire raises serious challenges about the ensuring the safety of drinking water over the coming weeks, the fact that THM levels can be monitored in real-time year round will give consumers confidence their water is safe to use before they do so”

 

About the Hetch Hetchy Reservoir

The reservoir serves the following water districts:

Alameda County, Hayward, Santa Clara County,Milpitas, Mountaint. View, Palo Alto, San Jose, Santa Clara, Purissima Hills Water District –  Stanford University, San Mateo County, Brisbane, Burlingame, Daly City, East Palo Alto, Hillsborough,  Menlo Park, Millbrae, Redwood City, San Coastside County Water District, Estero Municipal Improvement District, Guadalupe Valley Municipal Improvement District, Mid-Peninsula Water District, North Coast County Water District,  Westborough Water California Water Service Company,  Cal Water – Bear Gulch, Cal Water – Mid Peninsula District, Cal Water – South San Francisco

 

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Should we be better informed about the quality of our drinking water?

 

In our up-to-the-minute, news-driven, high-tech world, consumers can demand and receive information on just about everything from the ingredients of their favourite foods to their local air-quality index. Isn’t it a little strange, therefore, that we know so little about the quality of the water we use on a daily basis for drinking and washing? And even if nowadays some of us do get information about the quality of this vital resource, it often takes many weeks after the analysis has been done and long after we have used the water for the information to reach us.

 

Of course, for decades this was down to a technical and information gap, whereby, even experts either did not have sufficient information at hand or, more recently, they did not have the technology to relay this important information to us in anywhere near a real-time fashion.

 

And today? Well, many of us are alerted about the sometimes-inferior quality of our water, but only after the fact – which raises the question about what use the information is to us many weeks after the quality of our water has been measured to be so clearly lower than legal standards?

 

Indeed, if the fact that we receive such important information at such a late juncture were not enough of a worry, it is compounded by the knowledge that this need not be the case: as a few examples highlight, the technology is in place, it is proven and it is already regularly relaying water-quality information to millions.

 

In Seoul, the capital of the innovation-rich and tech-loving capital of South Korea, administrators have created Seoul Water Now, an unmanned system of checks and controls on the city’s water supply. Key, however, is that the system has an interactive public face in the form of an accompanying website that provides the city’s near-10 million residents with a whole raft of information about the quality of the water they use to wash, cook and drink.

 

Initially set up in 2005 after an investment of around 4.8 billion won (US$4m), the beauty of such a scheme is clear today: with information gathered from 99 measuring points and analysers, Seoul’s population can use a website to check the quality of the water they use in real time, 24 hours of every day.

 

Though a fine example, Seoul’s intelligent and transparent relaying of such important consumer information is not unique. The US cities of Benicia, Sunnyvale, California, and Lowell, Massachusetts, for example, are also at the progressive forefront in the quest to provide their populations with real-time and easily accessible information about the quality of their water supply.

 

Aqua Metrology Systems (AMS) is the British high-tech firm behind the latest innovation, with the clear beneficiaries of their technology, the THM-100, being consumers. Installed in 2013, it took its team of scientists and engineers in Silicon Valley five years to perfect the cutting-edge technology that accurately measures the presence of harmful carcinogenic Trihalomethanes (THMs) in drinking water and relays that information 24/7 to consumers via the AMS website: www.tthmalert.com. The THM-100 is fully automated and can provide real-time data at critical points in a city’s water network. This system takes hourly readings of water quality and if there is any change in the quality of the drinking water, the water utility can easily react rapidly to optimize treatment.

 

Already, several water companies in Europe and the US who have invested in AMS’s technology are able to act quickly to fluctuating THM levels, for instance, and minimise excessive treatment. Consequently, they are reducing their use of chemicals and energy while at the same time decreasing their carbon footprint.

 

As Scott Rovanpera, superintendent of the Benicia Water Treatment Plant, has indicated:

 “At the City of Benicia Water Treatment Plant, we strive to produce the highest quality water possible for our customers. Transparency is critical to the success of this relationship and making our THM results public illustrates not only our confidence in our ability to manage our water production to the highest levels possible, but also our confidence in the THM-100 as an instrument for monitoring THM levels.”

 

While consumers have a right to know what is in the water they drink, increasingly strict regulations by water and health authorities make a more accessible flow of water-quality information for consumers an increasing obligation for utility companies around the world.

 

Rick Bacon, CEO of AMS, provides an apt summary:

 “Real-time monitoring of water quality is an innovation that benefits the environment and improves consumer confidence in their drinking water supplies. There is now no technical reason why more cities do not take advantage of this technology to satisfy modern consumer and water-company needs for timely information about the quality of a critical resource.”

 

Which raises the all-important question: why shouldn’t we all be better informed about the quality of the water we consume daily?

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[Sources]

Seoul Water Now info by The Office of Waterworks Seoul Metropolitan Government: http://water.seoul.go.kr/sudohome/eng/overview.php

Seoul Water Now: http://water.seoul.go.kr/waternow/RealDataFullScale.php

Seoul population: https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ks.html

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