Helenthereef
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This has come up for me because we are in the aftermath of a cyclone, when drinking water can be contaminated, but power and wood are in limited supply, so boiling water is not practical for sterilising purposes.
Household bleach can be use to decontaminate drinking water, as long as basic proportions are followed. Essentially it's 2 drops standard (not perfumed or somehow turbo-charged) household bleach (e.g. Chlorox) to 1 Litre (or Quart) of clear water. Let stand for 30 min before drinking.
There are also tips on how to sterilise water containers, and cloudy water.
Worth knowing in a crisis - after all most of our tap water supply comes chlorinated - it's the same thing.
See links:
http://www.cdc.gov/healthywater/pdf/emergency/09_202278-B_Make_Water_Safe_Flyer_508.pdf
https://www.clorox.com/dr-laundry/disaster-preparedness-purifying-water/
http://www.csgnetwork.com/h2oemergencypurifycalc.html
Household bleach can be use to decontaminate drinking water, as long as basic proportions are followed. Essentially it's 2 drops standard (not perfumed or somehow turbo-charged) household bleach (e.g. Chlorox) to 1 Litre (or Quart) of clear water. Let stand for 30 min before drinking.
There are also tips on how to sterilise water containers, and cloudy water.
Worth knowing in a crisis - after all most of our tap water supply comes chlorinated - it's the same thing.
See links:
http://www.cdc.gov/healthywater/pdf/emergency/09_202278-B_Make_Water_Safe_Flyer_508.pdf
https://www.clorox.com/dr-laundry/disaster-preparedness-purifying-water/
http://www.csgnetwork.com/h2oemergencypurifycalc.html