Barium in New Hampshire Drinking Water
New Hampshire has 4,131 public water systems. 2871 have recorded barium violations.
Total Systems
4,131
With Violations
2,871
EPA MCL
2
Population Served
1.2M
Barium in New Hampshire: Key Facts
Total Water Systems
4,131
Systems with Violations
2,871
Lead Violations
482
Copper Violations
224
EPA Standard
2 mg/L
MCLG (goal): 2 mg/L
Water Systems with Violations in New Hampshire
| System | Population | Violations |
|---|---|---|
| STEELE POND DEV | 24 | 1622 |
| LOCKES LOCATION | 45 | 1357 |
| WEST EPPING WATER CO INC | 18 | 1339 |
| SEABROOK WATER DEPT | 14K | 1029 |
| ERROL WATER WORKS/WEST | 183 | 973 |
| MORNINGSIDE DRIVE | 80 | 934 |
| VIEW POINT COOP | 248 | 928 |
| HEMLOCK HILLS | 12 | 877 |
Health Effects of Barium Exposure
Blood pressure increase
Even near-MCL levels can raise blood pressure
Cardiac effects
Long-term high exposure linked to heart arrhythmias
GI and muscle effects
Can cause nausea, muscle weakness, and paralysis at very high levels
Increase in blood pressure at levels above the MCL. Long-term exposure can affect the cardiovascular system and kidneys.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there barium in New Hampshire water?
New Hampshire has 4,131 public water systems. 2871 have recorded barium violations based on EPA SDWIS data. If you are on a private well, your water is not covered by these regulations and should be tested independently.
How can I check my New Hampshire water for barium?
Search for your water system using the WaterCheck system lookup, or contact your utility and request a copy of your Consumer Confidence Report (CCR). The CCR is published annually and lists all detected contaminants, their levels, and the EPA MCLs. For private wells, contact a state-certified lab for independent testing.
What is the EPA limit for barium?
The EPA Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) for barium is 2 mg/L. Systems that exceed MCLs are required to notify customers and take corrective action.
Barium at a Glance
Source
Discharge of drilling wastes; discharge from metal refineries; erosion of natural deposits
How to Filter Barium
- +Reverse osmosis and ion exchange systems remove barium
- +Distillation is also effective
- +NSF/ANSI 58 certified RO systems are the most reliable option