Know Your Environment. Protect Your Health.

Nitrate

Creekside Park

Nitrate, a fertilizer chemical, frequently contaminates drinking water due to agricultural and urban runoff, and discharges from municipal wastewater treatment plants and septic tanks. Excessive nitrate in water can cause oxygen deprivation in infants and increase the risk of cancer. Click here to read more about nitrate.

 

7

Samples

0

Samples exceeding legal limit (MCL)

6

Samples exceeding
health guidelines

Testing results - average by year

 
YearAverage resultSamples takenDetectionsRange of results
20180.400 ppm110.400 ppm
20190.300 ppm110.300 ppm
20200.200 ppm110.200 ppm
2021N/A00N/A
20220.168 ppm220.135 ppm - 0.200 ppm
20230.247 ppm220.247 ppm

ppm = parts per million

State, National, and Health Guidelines for Drinking Water

EWG Health Guideline: 0.14 ppm

The EWG health guideline of 0.14 parts per million, or ppm, for nitrate and nitrite is based on the equivalent health guideline for nitrate, as defined in a peer-reviewed scientific study by EWG. This guideline represents a one-in-one-million annual cancer risk level.

EPA Maximum Contaminant
Level (MCL): 10 ppm

The legal limit for nitrate, established in 1962, was developed to protect infants from acute methemoglobinemia, a life-threatening disorder of oxygen transport in the body. This limit does not fully protect against the risk of cancer and harm to the developing fetus.

ppm = parts per million

All test results

Date Lab ID Result
2018-02-07AY01356-NIT0.400 ppm
2019-03-06AZ026230.300 ppm
2020-05-11BA06521-NIT0.200 ppm
2022-02-24BD013050.200 ppm
2022-12-14JH22107120.135 ppm
2023-06-26JH23049190.247 ppm
2023-06-26JH2304919-NIT0.247 ppm