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Radionuclides in Drinking Water Rule

In 2000, EPA revised the radionuclides regulation, which had been in effect since 1977.  The revisions required new monitoring provisions to ensure that all customers of community water systems will receive water that meets the Maximum Contaminant Levels for radionuclides in drinking water.  EPA also issued a standard for uranium, as required by the 1986 amendments to the Safe Drinking Water Act. The current standards are: combined radium 226/228 of 5 pCi/L; a gross alpha standard for all alphas of 15 pCi/L (not including radon and uranium); a combined standard of 4 mrem/year for beta emitters. The new MCL for uranium is 30 µg/L.

Analytical Methods

In 2004, EPA issued a final rule with three additional analytical methods that use inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) technology for compliance determinations of Uranium in drinking water.

Rule-Making History

In 2004, EPA published minor corrections to the Radionuclides Rule to identify a detection limit for uranium and to clarify text in the rule.

In 2000, EPA published a Notice of Data Availability (NODA) to update the public and the regulated community with new information that had become available since the 1991 proposal.  The Agency also developed a Technical Support Document, which provides background information and further describes the analyses discussed in the NODA, and the preliminary Health  Risk Reduction and Cost Analysis, which presents the analyses of projected impacts, costs, risk reductions, and benefits for the uranium NPDWR and the new monitoring requirement for radium-228. 

In 1997, EPA held a public meeting to discuss regulatory issues associated with the 1991 Radionuclides Rule proposal. 

In 1991, EPA proposed revisions to the July 9, 1976 rule.  The final rule published in 2000 finalized this 1991 proposal.

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