Radon In water Eliot, ME

Radon in Water Solutions

Radon in water is not a problem until the gas escapes the water as it enters your home via faucets, showers, bathtubs and washing machines.  As radon is a colorless, odorless, tasteless element, the need for a water test becomes more critical. Radon is a radioactive gas which comes from the natural decay of uranium which can be found in nearly all soils.

Your home may trap radon inside where it can build up in concentration. Any home may have a radon in water or radon in air problem; new and old homes, well-sealed and drafty homes, and homes with or without basements.  Radon typically moves up through the ground to the air above and into your home through cracks and other holes in the foundation, even ones you cannot see. It can also get into your home through well water when you turn on your shower and other water using points inside your home.  Radon in water is not an uncommon occurrence in Eliot wells.

To remove radon in water, a properly designed system that agitates the radon gas out of the water then vents it safely outside of the home is a proven, effective approach to correcting this problem.

State Contaminant Guideline Levels (in pCi/L); (As of 7/7/2016)

Maine = 4,000  pico curries / liter                                  Massachusetts = 10,000   ”        ”

Rhode Island = 4,000           ”                 ”               New Hampshire = 2,000      ”                 ”

Radon in water Eliot ME

Radon in Water Removal

Any home may have a radon problem from such sources as:

1. Cracks in solid floors

2. Cracks in walls

3. Construction joints

4. Gaps in service pipes

5. Gaps in suspended floors

6. Spaces within walls

7. Your water supply when gas is released into the air in the home

Radon in well water in Eliot, ME

Radon is a Class A carcinogen and the second leading cause of lung cancer. The increased risk of developing lung cancer from radon is directly related to the concentration of radon and the length of time that a person is exposed to it. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) estimates that there are between 5,000 and 30,000 radon-related lung cancer deaths each year. Radon is the number one cause of lung cancer in nonsmokers, according to EPA.

Smokers have eight times the risk from radon as non-smokers.  Cigarette smokers, in particular,  should keep their exposure to radon as low as possible.  If the house was tested in an infrequently used basement, it may have measured a radon level that is higher than the actual level you are exposed to, spending most of your time upstairs. People with young children should be more concerned with the possible consequences of radon exposure 20 years from now than someone in their late sixties or seventies. Families with a hereditary predisposition of cancer should be more concerned about radon exposure than families who don’t have any history of cancer.

Although no level of radon in water or air is considered absolutely safe, the USEPA action level for radon is 4.0 picocuries per liter of AIR (pCi/L). (pCi/l= picocuries per liter, the most common method of reporting radon levels. A pico Curie is 0.000,000,000,001 (one-trillionth) of a Curie, an international measurement unit of radioactivity. One pCi/l means that in one liter of air there will be 2.2 radioactive disintegrations each minute. For example, at 4 pCi/l there will be approximately 12,672 radioactive disintegrations in one liter of air, during a 24-hour period.)

The risk of developing lung cancer at 4.0 pCi/L in AIR is estimated at about 7 lung cancer deaths per 1000 persons, which is why the USEPA and IEMA recommend reducing your radon level if the concentration is 4.0 pCi/L or more.

For more on radon, see radon in water epa.

radon mitigation from well Eliot, MEWater filtration for radon Eliot ME

H2O Care, Inc. is a full service regional firm formed in 1989 for the testing, analyzing and correcting of water quality issues in Southern Maine & NH and Eastern Massachusetts.  The company has been published multiple times in Water Technology Magazines. -see http://h2ocare.com.  Reach us at [email protected] or 800-539-1100.