|
|
Human HealthFact Sheet: Revised National Recommended Water Quality CriteriaEPA-822-F-03-012; December 2003
EPA is publishing 15 updated national recommended water quality criteria for the protection of human health:
These updated criteria are based on EPA's new methodology for deriving human health water quality criteria (i.e., the 2000 Human Health Methodology) and supercede criteria for these chemicals that the Agency had published earlier. What are human health water quality criteria? Human health water quality criteria are numeric values that protect human health from the harmful effects of pollutants in ambient water. Under section 304(a) of the CWA, water quality criteria are based solely on data and scientific judgments about the relationship between pollutant concentrations and environmental and human health effects: they do not consider economic or social impacts. EPA's national recommended water quality criteria are guidance to states and authorized tribes in adopting water quality standards in support of the CWA. They also provide guidance to EPA when it promulgates Federal regulations under the CWA. They are not regulations in themselves and do not impose legally binding requirements on EPA, states, authorized tribes or the public. How were the fifteen human health water quality criteria updated? EPA revised the 15 human health water quality criteria based on the Agency's methodology for deriving national recommended water quality criteria for the protection of human health (see Methodology for Deriving Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the Protection of Human Health (2000), EPA-822-B-00-004, October 2000). This methodology incorporates significant scientific advances made in the last two decades, particularly in the areas of cancer and noncancer risk assessments, exposure assessments, and methodologies to estimate bioaccumulation in fish. The updated water quality criteria integrate the national default freshwater/estuarine fish consumption rate of 17.5 grams/day. Thirteen of the criteria integrate a relative source contribution value from the national primary drinking water standards for the same chemicals. EPA also incorporated a new cancer potency factor for 1,3-dichloropropene and vinyl chloride and a new reference dose for 1,1-dichloroethylene, hexachlorocyclopentadiene, and lindane. These values have already been published in the Agency's Integrated Risk Information System. The bioconcentration factors (BCFs) used in deriving today's criteria are consistent with the BCFs used to promulgate human health water quality criteria for priority toxic pollutants in rules such as the1992 National Toxics Rule and the 2000 California Toxics Rule. What are the updated human health water quality criteria? The following table presents the fifteen updated human health water quality criteria:
Where can I find more information on the updated human health water quality criteria? For more information, contact Cindy Roberts, Health and Ecological Criteria Division (4304T), U.S. EPA, Ariel Rios Building, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C., 20460; (202) 566-1124 or send an email to roberts.cindy@epa.gov. You can find the Federal Register notice or updated national recommended
water quality criteria on the Office of Science and Technology's webpage
at http://www.epa.gov/waterscience/standards/wqcriteria.html.
|
Water Quality Standards | Drinking Water | Research and Development |
||
|