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Warschau Feb. 20091 Dr. K. Luden German guidance document on §9 dealing with derogations Dr. Katrin Luden.

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Presentation on theme: "Warschau Feb. 20091 Dr. K. Luden German guidance document on §9 dealing with derogations Dr. Katrin Luden."— Presentation transcript:

1 Warschau Feb. 20091 Dr. K. Luden German guidance document on §9 dealing with derogations Dr. Katrin Luden

2 Drinking water directive 98/83/EC Dr. K. Luden §9 Derogations Member States may provide for derogations from the parametric values set out in Annex I, Part B, (chemical) or set in accordance with Article 5(3) (others), up to a maximum value to be determined by them, provided no derogation constitutes a potential danger to human health and provided that the supply of water intended for human consumption in the area concerned cannot otherwise be maintained by any other reasonable means. Derogations shall be limited to as short a time as possible and shall not exceed three years, towards the end of which a review shall be conducted to determine whether sufficient progress has been made. Where a Member State intends to grant a second derogation, it shall communicate the review, along with the grounds for its decision on the second derogation, to the Commission. No such second derogation shall exceed three years.

3 Drinking water directive 98/83/EC Dr. K. Luden Derogations If the competent authorities consider the non-compliance with the parametric value to be trivial, and if action taken in accordance with Article 8(2) is sufficient to remedy the problem within 30 days, the requirements of paragraph 3 (specify grounds, parameters, timeframe…) need not be applied. possible only when no derogation for [..] more than 30 days on aggregate during the previous 12 months

4 Drinking water directive 98/83/EC Dr. K. Luden (1)param. Ann. 1Part B (chemical) first and second derogation (2)third derogation (3)specification of grounds, parameters, maximum values, area, food productions, monitoring, remediation plan duration (4)trivial derogations (5)30 days (6)information of the affected population

5 German drinking water ordinance Dr. K. Luden § 9 Measures in case of non-compliance with limit values and requirements Health office gets to know of non compliance - immediate decision of whether this is liable to cause a hazard to human health; orders of investigation to find the cause of non compliance If hazard to human health is feared: alternative supply (if possible) or continuous water supply under security measures Hazard to human health cannot be ruled out by above measures: interruption of water supply

6 Dr. K. Luden § 9 Measures in case of non-compliance with limit values and requirements (4)In all cases of non compliance health office orders remedial action (5)If the non compliance is considered no risk to human health the health office sets a maximum value and a time allowed for the correction within 30 days; does not apply to E. coli, Enterococci (and Coliform bacteria) (6)In case of non compliance for chemical parameters: derogation permissable for 3 years (information of the federal ministry of health) German drinking water ordinance

7 Dr. K. Luden § 9 Measures in case of non-compliance with limit values and requirements (7)Review of the permitted derogation and second permit of derogation (8)Under exceptional circumstances application of a third permit for derogation filed with the EU (9)Same applies to indicator parameters (10)Specified information in the permits of derogation as in EU directive (11)Information of the consumers/public (12)Not applicable to water in bottles or containers German drinking water ordinance

8 Dr. K. Luden §9 Guidance document Part 1 Microbiology Indicator organisms E. coli, Enterococci and Coliform bacteria Pathogens liable to damage human health Legionella Part 2 Chemistry Concentration of chemicals possibly dangerous to human health Carcinogens Disinfection products …

9 Dr. K. Luden §9 Guidance document General information Invariably every single time a limit value is exceeded (plausibility of the results critically reviewed) immediately the question whether this poses a risk to human health has to be answered All decisions by the health office have to be based on that §16 of the German DW-ordinance requires action plans for derogations Disruption of a water should be an emergency measure only

10 Dr. K. Luden §9 Guidance document Dangers of an interruption of the water supply Incalculable epidemic risk due to non sufficient supply of water for hygienic matters (body hygiene, laundry, dishwashing or sewage system) Risk due to lack of water for firefighting The more people are affected by the interruption the higher the potential hazard and damage to be balanced against the potential benefit

11 Dr. K. Luden Indicator parameters Limit value exceeded for microbiological indicator organisms: ? Is there a potential danger to human health? yes> act as described for E. coli no> measures for identifying the cause and eliminating it, legal constraints, derogation permit Examples: Colony counts C. perfringens Turbidity

12 Dr. K. Luden Colony counts Abnormal change: Health authorities and water company investigate the cause and decide on necessary measures e.g. flushing of the pipes increase of concentration of disinfection chemicals further investigation of additional parameters like potentially pathogenic organisms like P. aeruginosa, Aeromonads, Legionella)

13 Dr. K. Luden C. perfringens Confirmed detection of C. perfringens:  Even with chlorination occurrence of Cryptosporidia, Giardia or Viruses not excluded  Immediate investigation on cause and its elimination  Possibly analysis for Cryptosporidia and Giardia  Analysis of fecal indicators in the source water advisable  boiling of water should be recommended or bottled water should be used as foodstuff (10 to 30 Cryptosporidia cysts and 3 to 5 Giardia cysts per 100 l can cause an outbreak)

14 Dr. K. Luden E. coli, Enterococci (Coliform bacteria) Coliform bacteria:  Without potential hazard to human health  Not an undisputable evidence of fecal contamination  Nevertheless unwanted contamination therefore identification of the organism necessary  Investigation of the cause (e.g. with the help of an institute for hygiene)  Measures for continuation of water supply

15 Dr. K. Luden E. coli, Enterococci (Coliform bacteria) E. coli and Enterococci: Limit value exceeded: always potential risk to human health given  Switch to a different water supply if possible  Disinfection (may be not sufficient for Cryptosporidia, Giardia, C. perfringens and some viruses) and information of the public,  boiling for 3 minutes as a measure of self protection  If disinfection not possible: restriction of use (boiling, toilet…)  If those measures are not sufficient: interruption of water supply (only in extreme situations)

16 Dr. K. Luden Pathogens Pathogens posing a hazard to human health: Possible causes: direct influence of manure accidents or catastrophes direct connection between drinking water and sewage pipes … If there is only an isolated detection of a pathogen plausibility of the test result should be confirmed by another lab or repeated analysis Procedure as for E. coli

17 Dr. K. Luden Legionella The technical specifications of DVGW and a publication dealing with Legionella in hospitals etc. are referred to

18 Dr. K. Luden Chemistry  Tables with maximum parametric values concerning toxic concentrations specific for adults or infants and small children  Distinguished between compounds with or without a threshold effect  Dealing with potentially carcinogen compounds Questions: Is there a hazard to human health? Is the hazard “bigger” than from interruption of the water supply? What measures for protection (alternative water supply)?

19 Dr. K. Luden Example Several incidences of coliform bacteria within the distributions system of a water supplier (city of 50.000). Also higher total plate counts than usual. Hazard to human health? Where is the source of the contamination? What measures have to be taken?

20 Dr. K. Luden Example An “ancient” water tower (1897) was identified as source of the contamination: dead flies on the surface of the waterbody Some of the coliforms were identified as potentially pathogenic (E. chloacae and S. marcescens): boiling recommendation

21 Dr. K. Luden Example ProblemMeasures Dead flies on water surface remove/cleaning of sides in zone of water level  higher colony counts Old pipes  no air/water flushing possible Flushing in direction towards the tower (change of flow direction)  higher colony counts Shutdown of the water tower for cleaning and disinfection not possible, needed for maintaining pressure in the pipes of the city New water works, pressure maintaining pumps  needed time during which a continuous overflow was maintained Derogation for several months until pumps were installed.

22 Dr. K. Luden Example 2 ProblemMeasures Within a water supply zone (city) several occurrences of coliform bacteria in monitoring results. Sporadic in a storage tank at the water works Boiling recommendation as well as flushing and pressure tests in the piping Cleaning and disinfection of the tank Samples were taken at hydrant below the surface Chose more reliable sampling points (e.g. behind the water meter in households) Fair area between the water works and the affected area. area was disconnected from the water supply (high stagnation times reflux possible…) Flushing and installation of devices to prevent reflux into the pipes

23 Dr. K. Luden Thank you for your attention!


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