A Creative Solution To a Dangerous Problem

by Jeff Ventura on June 18, 2008

LA’s Ivanhoe Reservoir contains millions of gallons of drinking water for LA residents.  In the summer, however, problem presents itself: the water can potentially become contaminated with bromate (depending on daily outbound flow rates, one would presume), which is a natural reaction between solar light, chlorine (a treatment chemical) and naturally-occurring bromide.

Seeing how chlorine is a necessary treatment additive and the bromide is a natural element within the water, Ivanhoe officials got creative and decided to keep sunlight away from the water by dropping over 3 million black spheres (called bird balls) into the reservoir.  This effectively created an opaque layer atop the water that serves as a solar shield.  Problem solved.  Creative, yes?

Check out a video of the action here.

But allow me to think out loud for a second: Ivanhoe is preventing the formation of a carcinogen by interrupting the photochemical reaction that forms bromate, the threat in question.  But is anyone thinking about the potential toxicity of millions of plastic balls leaching into the drinking water supply, especially millions of black balls that take the beating of the LA sun all summer?  To me, this seems like you could be trading one problem for another.

A bunch more photos at Curbed.

(via SVN)

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

dlzc June 19, 2008 at 11:55 am

Bromate is NOT a carcinogen, unless it is potassium bromate, and you are one of a couple of species of mutant rat. Sodium bromate has not caused cancer, in levels 10000 time higher, in exposures of up to a year.

The correct term is “suspected human carcinogen”. Because the US-EPA thinks one in a million of us has the kidneys of a mutant rat, and they ignore that excesses of potassium are required.

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