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EWG's Tap Water Database — 2021 UPDATE

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N-Nitrosopyrrolidine

Status: No national drinking water standard exists

 

N-nitrosopyrrolidine is one of the DNA-damaging, cancer-causing contaminants called N-nitrosamines that can form during water treatment with the use of certain disinfectants, such as chloramine. Read More.

Pollution of water sources with effluent from municipal wastewater treatment plants and runoff from animal feeding operations contributes to nitrosamine formation. Fifteen different nitrosamines are listed as carcinogens in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services National Toxicology Program Report on Carcinogens. The federal government has not set a legal limit for nitrosamines in drinking water and water utilities typically do not test for these contaminants. California has set a public health goal for one of the most common nitrosamines, N-nitrosodimethylamine or NDMA, at 0.003 parts per billion in drinking water, a concentration that corresponds to an estimated one-in-one-million cancer risk.

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States reporting N-nitrosopyrrolidine in drinking water

UTILITIES WITH CONTAMINATION
State UtilitiesPeople Served
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Utilities with the highest amounts of N-nitrosopyrrolidine, 2017-2019

ALL UTILITIES
LARGE UTILITIES
UtilityLocationTestsAverage levelPeople served
UtilityLocationTestsAverage levelPeople served