BS 8551:2015
Current
The latest, up-to-date edition.
Provision and management of temporary water supplies and distribution networks (not including provisions for statutory emergencies). Code of practice
Hardcopy , PDF
English
30-09-2015
Foreword
0 Introduction
1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Terms and definitions
4 Water safety planning and risk management
5 Medical assessment and water quality hygiene
awareness training
6 Quality assurance documentation
7 Wholesome supply suitability
8 Installation of temporary distribution systems
9 Vessels for storage and transport of water
10 Disinfection
11 Monitoring and sampling of temporary water supplies
12 Bottled water for temporary supply
Annexes
Annex A (normative) Staff water quality awareness training
Annex B (informative) Flow demands
Annex C (informative) Chloraminated water
Annex D (informative) Information required to manage the
provision of a temporary water supply
Annex E (informative) Guidelines for the preparation and
use of chlorine and the use of chlorine disinfection
solutions
Annex F (informative) Example drinking water tanker or
wheeled bowser driver checklist
Annex G (informative) Chlorine concentration, contact period
for tank disinfection and minimum residual free chlorine
Bibliography
Defines recommendations and guidance for the provision and management of temporary water supplies and distribution networks to ensure the water supplied for domestic purposes is wholesome.
Committee |
EH/3
|
DevelopmentNote |
Supersedes BS 8551(2011) & 15/30299654 DC. (09/2015)
|
DocumentType |
Standard
|
Pages |
64
|
PublisherName |
British Standards Institution
|
Status |
Current
|
Supersedes |
This British Standard gives recommendations and guidance for the provision and management of temporary water supplies and distribution networks to ensure the water supplied for domestic purposes is wholesome. It is applicable to situations when a permanent supply is insufficient, not available or not required, for example, at building sites and outdoor public events. NOTE The drinking water regulators, water undertakers and local authorities have in place collective arrangements for dealing with operational events, incidents and emergencies in relation to both public and private water supplies, and they ought always to be informed and/or consulted before a temporary water supply arrangement is put in place. The standard gives recommendations and guidance on procedures and documentation for: risk assessment and management; supplying, maintaining and cleaning vessels used to collect and transport wholesome water or function as temporary supply points; storage and quality control of bottled water stocks intended for temporary supply; connecting to a permanent distribution network for extraction purposes, avoiding contamination risks; installing temporary water storage vessels and temporary pipework for distribution networks serving temporary water draw-off points whilst avoiding contamination risks; and monitoring and sampling. This British Standard is intended to provide guidance on good practice related to anticipated temporary water supplies and installation of temporary distribution networks, but its principles are applicable to contingency arrangements for water supply incidents and emergencies. The British Standard also gives guidance on water supply hygiene and management practices which can involve staff training and/or operational procedures. The British Standard relates to the supply of water that has already been treated to make it safe for drinking, and its provisions are intended to prevent contamination. The British Standard is not applicable to: the use and maintenance of large-bottle water dispensers, for example, the bottles often used in office water coolers/dispensers (although the management of stocks of water held for use in such devices is covered); the dispensing of the water supplied from vessels which are managed outside a predefined management regime, such as: personalized utensils (for example, sports water bottles or personal filters); personal portable containers designed for carrying water; and vending machines; the supply of water for the flushing of toilets/urinals only; and the extraction and treatment of raw water from springs, streams, wells, boreholes, lakes, rain or seawater as part of the provision of either a public or private water supply (regulated activity).
BS EN 12671:2009 | Chemicals used for treatment of water intended for human consumption. Chlorine dioxide generated in situ |
BS 8580:2010 | Water quality. Risk assessments for Legionella control. Code of practice |
BS ISO 5667-21:2010 | Water quality. Sampling Guidance on sampling of drinking water distributed by tankers or means other than distribution pipes |
BS EN ISO/IEC 17025:2005 | General requirements for the competence of testing and calibration laboratories |
BS EN ISO 19458:2006 | Water quality. Sampling for microbiological analysis |
BS ISO 5667-5:2006 | Water quality. Sampling Guidance on sampling of drinking water from treatment works and piped distribution systems |
BS EN 938:2009 | Chemicals used for treatment of water intended for human consumption. Sodium chlorite |
BS 8550:2010 | Guide for the auditing of water quality sampling |
BS EN ISO 9000:2015 | Quality management systems. Fundamentals and vocabulary |
BS EN 806-4:2010 | Specifications for installations inside buildings conveying water for human consumption Installation |
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