Brendan Burgess
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So what is the strategy?[broken link removed] engineer [broken link removed] said a lot of people will have no water between 8pm to 7am for the next five days.
Households and businesses in Fingal, South Dublin county, Dun Laoghaire Rathdown, Dublin city council areas, well as parts of Kildare and Wicklow, face restrictions, he said.
Irish Times
So what is the strategy?
1) Conserve water as much as possible.
2) Fill up a kettle or two of drinking water from the cold tap before 8 pm.
3) If want to drink from the hot tap, boil it first
It's not clear to me if there is a problem during the day. Should we be particularly careful about water at all times or just during the night?
Have a look at the bottom of the reservoir where you drinking water comes from
You really should not drink water from the hot tap.
How do you clean your teeth? As far as I know, the only fresh water supply is into the kitchen?
Brendan
Microbes flourish at higher temperatures. Residual chlorine in your water is less effective at killing bugs at higher temperatures,
Warmer water picks up copper and lead from old plumbing systems (and boiling only serves to concentrate these elements)
I have mains water feeding into the cold tap in the bathroom.
Not sure if this is normal?
Not sure if it's legal?
Its ok to use the hot tap water for cleaning your teeth as your just rinsing your mouth out and not drinking it.
Does anyone know the nature of the "production problems" faced by the water producers? Dublin city Engineer was very coy about it this morning.
Has DCC Chief Engineer been more forthcoming about the nature of the "production problems" over the last few days?
Council engineers are still investigating the cause, but believe the recent heavy rain has made the reservoir water more difficult to treat at the plant. A council spokesperson said that although the incoming water is still of a satisfactory quality, its constituent characteristics have changed. The council said the quality of water being supplied to homes has not been compromised.
Speaking on RTÉ's Morning Ireland, Dublin City Engineer Michael Phillips said: "The characteristics of water change from season to season, they normally operate within a certain band. We haven't experienced this, in this plant, over the past 20 years. "So whether it's due to the weather or the climate we do not know."
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