The Canadian Water Network, the Alberta Water Research Institute, and the Ontario Centres of Excellence have collaborated to create the Canadian Municipal Water Management Research Consortium, a new initiative to engage municipal water authorities and allow them to access research capacity to tackle mutually identified, critical issues. The challenge of managing uncertainty in the provision of safe drinking water was selected as one such issue. An international expert panel with scientists from Australia, Canada, the USA and Europe was assembled to work with a steering committee of municipal water providers and drinking water regulators. This group has posed the challenge: How best can drinking water providers address risk and uncertainty to assure safe drinking water? Five key drivers to this challenge were identified: the current large list of drinking water contaminants, the inevitable growth of that list as a result of analytical advances not matched by our ability to assess small, mostly immeasurable health risks, the lack of clarity on public expectations for safe drinking water, misunderstanding of new, small risks and a need to assure aesthetic quality. Promoting the means for achieving a common understanding of risk and uncertainty among water providers and regulators was identified as a priority objective. The project has been initiated by developing, in a Canadian drinking water context, working definitions for safe drinking water, risk and uncertainty, with appropriate illustrative examples. The limitations of sole reliance on compliance monitoring for numerical contaminant limits compared with the merits of a preventive risk management/water safety plan approach were elaborated. Based on the foundations adopted, a toolkit is being developed to assist with issues ranging from a risk hierarchy, various products to promote better understanding of how risk assessment is performed, and products to enhance communications with consumers about drinking water safety.
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Research Article|
December 01 2011
Managing uncertainty in the provision of safe drinking water Available to Purchase
S. E. Hrudey;
1Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2G3, Canada
E-mail: [email protected]
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B. Conant;
B. Conant
2Canadian Water Network, 200 University Ave W, Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3G1, Canada
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I. P. Douglas;
I. P. Douglas
3City of Ottawa – Drinking Water Services, 1 River St., Ottawa, Ontario K1Y 2C4, Canada
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J. Fawell;
J. Fawell
4John Fawell Consulting, High Wycombe, UK
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T. Gillespie;
T. Gillespie
5City Manager's Office, 4705-50 Avenue, Wetaskiwin, Alberta T9A 2E9, Canada
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D. Hill;
D. Hill
6Alberta Water Research Institute, 10180 – 101 Street, Edmonton, Alberta T5J 3S4, Canada
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W. Leiss;
W. Leiss
7McLaughlin Centre, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6N5, Canada
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J. B. Rose;
J. B. Rose
8Homer Nowlin Chair in Water Research, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 4889, USA
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M. Sinclair
M. Sinclair
9Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia
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Water Supply (2011) 11 (6): 675–681.
Article history
Received:
July 26 2010
Accepted:
September 24 2010
Citation
S. E. Hrudey, B. Conant, I. P. Douglas, J. Fawell, T. Gillespie, D. Hill, W. Leiss, J. B. Rose, M. Sinclair; Managing uncertainty in the provision of safe drinking water. Water Supply 1 December 2011; 11 (6): 675–681. doi: https://doi.org/10.2166/ws.2011.075
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