BBC NEWS Americas Africa Europe Middle East South Asia Asia Pacific Arabic Spanish Russian Chinese Welsh
BBCi CATEGORIES   TV   RADIO   COMMUNICATE   WHERE I LIVE   INDEX    SEARCH 

BBC NEWS
 You are in:  Health
Front Page 
World 
UK 
UK Politics 
Business 
Sci/Tech 
Health 
Background Briefings 
Medical notes 
Education 
Entertainment 
Talking Point 
In Depth 
AudioVideo 


Commonwealth Games 2002

BBC Sport

BBC Weather

SERVICES 
Saturday, 20 April, 2002, 07:42 GMT 08:42 UK
Private water supplies 'E.coli risk'
Filling a kettle
The water supplies to whole villages could be at risk
Four out of five private water supplies in the UK fail to meet EU drinking standards and put more than half a million people at risk of E.coli, a BBC investigation has found.

The study, by Radio 4's Farming Today programme, warns that the prevalence of the potentially fatal disease is rising, and it is entering the water course.

A leading microbiologist has described the situation as a "mess", and called for a tightening of the current regulations on water quality testing.

Dr Norman Simmons, a former member of a government food safety advisory panel, says more needs to be done to ensure that drinking water supplies are safe.

Water testing

In Britain there are at least 300,000 private water supplies.

The majority are in the countryside and they can range from a well supplying a single farm to large businesses. Some even supply hospitals.

They are defined as water that is not provided by a licensed water undertaker, in other words, a water company.

The extent of water testing appears to rely upon the number of people using it.

The regulations state that if a private supply provides water for one house then it may never be tested - and even if there is an adjacent campsite or caravan park it is only once a year.

If it supplies 500 people - and that could be a small village - then it need only be tested twice a year.

See also:

18 Apr 02 | Scotland
All-clear for water supplies
26 Jun 01 | Scotland
Hospital water bacteria fears
18 Apr 00 | UK
Sheep infect drinking water
12 Jan 02 | Health
E.coli used to reduce infection
04 May 00 | Sci/Tech
E. coli risk 'from family pets'
Internet links:


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites

Links to more Health stories are at the foot of the page.


E-mail this story to a friend

Links to more Health stories