
The cabinet will ban lead pipes at child locations and for rental homes. This follows an earlier advice from the Health Council, which found that the harmfulness of lead in water for babies and children, but also for adults, is greater than expected, the government reports.
No generic ban will be imposed in existing buildings. The cabinet believes that owners and residents also have their own responsibility in this regard as to whether and when they want to have existing lead pipes removed and how they provide clean drinking water. However, owners and residents are well informed about the risks, emphatically also at the time of purchase.
Bottle feeding young children
In some houses, especially old houses with lead pipes, the lead content in the tap water is too high. This can pose a health risk, especially for bottle-fed babies, young children and pregnant women. That is why the Health Council recommended that the remaining lead pipes be remediated in 2019. It is estimated that there are still between 100,000 and 200,000 houses with lead pipes. Until that happens, those at risk should be given bottled water.
lead poisoning
Unicef research shows that almost 60,000 children in the Netherlands have lead poisoning, of which more than 7,600 are walking around with more than 10 micrograms of lead in their blood. This poisoning is mainly caused by lead water pipes. Children with too much lead in their blood can suffer permanent brain damage. Babies and children under the age of five are especially vulnerable, because their intestines absorb the toxic material more easily and their brains are developing strongly. Lead poisoning can eventually lead to learning and behavioral problems and lower intelligence in children.
Ban
In the coming period, the ban on child locations and rental housing will be further elaborated. The ban will be included in the Living Environment Building Works Decree. The exact effective date has yet to be determined.
By: National Education Guide
Ban on lead pipes due to too high lead content in tap water
Source link Ban on lead pipes due to too high lead content in tap water
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