Is it safe to drink water with a strong chlorine smell?

2/19/2014 3:08:34 PM

Yes, the water is safe to drink.

Drinking water is purified at a Water Treatment Works (WTW) using one of a variety of methods, and if everyone drank directly from the outflow of the works there would be no need for the chlorine. However, the water then has to travel, sometimes for several days and tens or even hundreds of kilometres, along pipes before it reaches the consumer. These pipes are never perfectly clean — they contain a mixture of old pipe fragments (iron, cement), silt, and bacteria stuck to their walls — and the chlorine is necessary to keep the drinking water sterile while it travels.

Whether or not you can taste the chlorine depends on a number of factors: your distance from the WTW (the chlorine decays over time), the condition of the pipes (and thus how much chlorine is necessary to keep the water safe), and whether the water company uses chlorine, with a strong taste, or monochloramine, a related chemical that performs much the same task but has less taste.

1/20/2016 8:57:59 AM

My understanding is that chlorine, in the concentrations found in drinking water, does not pose an acute health danger. There may be health risks associated with long-term exposure, and this is a more controversial topic, where the literature and expert opinions are mixed. Most main-stream information seems to suggest it’s safe, but the skeptics claim a corporate bias, etc.

Some of the long-term exposure risks reported are cancer, heart trouble, and senility. Note that much of claimed risk is associated with long, hot showers, not drinking it.

If you’re only visiting for a while, and don’t have any known Chlorine sensitivities, you’ll probably be just fine. If the taste bothers you, or you’re especially concerned about long-term health affects, drink bottled water.

Some related SE posts:

2/19/2014 11:35:08 AM

The other answerers have answered your question about whether it is safe. I’d like to address the issue of chlorinated water not being very pleasant to drink by explaining how to dechlorinate the chlorinated water.

You can reduce that chloriney taste somewhat, mainly by aerating the water. I kept tropical fish for years and you can’t use chlorinated water in a fish tank because it will poison the fish (it’s used for killing bacteria and germs, after all). Special dechlorinating chemicals are sold for this purpose (I’d not recommend you use them as they’re designed for fish tanks not human consumption), but there is another way: let the water stand for 24 hours and the chlorine will evaporate. This should remove the chloriney taste.

If you want to do it more quickly, or you don’t want the water to taste stale (which could be worse than the chlorine taste in some people’s opinion), just aerate the water as much as you can. Get two big glasses and pour it from one to the other back and forth for a little while. The more you air it, the less chlorine it will contain and hence the less chloriney it will taste.

As I’m sure you realise, removing the chlorine won’t remove the germ-killing effects that the chlorine had as those effects have already taken place, so it will still be safe to drink from that perspective.

2/19/2014 8:59:30 AM

Yes.

The chlorine is put in there exactly in order to make it safe to drink by killing germs. If tap water is not chlorinated, it can mean one of two things:

  • either the place has no regulations concerning germ counts in tap water and whether it’s safe to drink is basically up to luck.
  • or there are such regulations and the water provider is able to ensure that the source of the water is germ free (typically deep wells or mountain springs) and the delivery infrastructure preserves this.

Countries where water quality is regulated typically require constant checks and chlorination when and if germ counts rise above safe levels. This can be necessary constantly in regions where the only available water is from rivers, or temporarily when there is contamination somewhere in the system.

Swimming pools and decorative fountains are chlorinated because the water there is constantly contaminated from outside.

2/19/2014 8:17:09 AM

Yes it is.

It is just a matter of taste (not the best obviously).

I have been drinking water like this for years in Barcelona and various parts of Greece where it is very common.

But the main reason I say it is safe is this:

I have been walking the GR11 route, the one that does all the pyrenees from Barcelona coast (more or less) to the Basque Country in Spain. During this walk (40 days) I had chlorine tablets that obviously give it a not so popular taste. I was fine!

So yeah go on and drink. You can find other tablets that take the taste off the chlorine but I would not mess with even more chemicals.

Credit:stackoverflow.com

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Hello,My name is Aparna Patel,I’m a Travel Blogger and Photographer who travel the world full-time with my hubby.I like to share my travel experience.

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