Green Means
Choosing Safe Water Lines
By Shannon Scott
Forget the
mouse trap; the person who develops green, safe, potable water pipes may win a
Nobel Prize for chemistry. We expect potable
water lines to be safe and last forever without problems. Yet given that green home building considers a
product’s sum total environmental impact, from manufacture to reuse, there is
no good option for residential water lines.
Copper
Copper proves an
environmental problem since it is extracted through open pit mining. Processing copper ore requires significant
amounts of water. Often there is
increased water pollution from discharged mine effluent and seepage from
tailings and waste rock impoundments.
Water was referred to as “…mining’s most common casualty” (James Lyon,
interview, Mineral Policy Center, Washington D.C.). Given diminishing global fresh water supplies
and disruption of natural landscapes copper is not a green choice.
Over
time, copper pipe can develop pinhole leaks. These result from small localized
corrosion spots called pitting corrosion. There’s no definitive data to isolate
the cause. Some theories include electrostatic
charges from electrical systems being grounded through the plumbing, too low or
too high water pH, or chemicals used in municipal water treatment. Pitting corrosion gives copper pipes a 20 –
50 year life span before replacement.
While copper is a necessary mineral for humans, cases of
copper toxicity are rare but may occur where pH levels are below 6.5. Excess copper consumption may lead to liver
damage. Several home water filters on
the market can reduce excess copper levels.
Copper
pipes burst when they freeze. Once water
freezes and expands, it forces right through any weak area in a copper wall. Too many home owners have come home from
winter vacations to flooded homes or to having no available water.
Since
copper withstands high temperatures, we used it for our active solar system.
The pipes don’t carry potable water.
They are filled with a propylene glycol (relatively safe antifreeze) and
water solution that circulates from a header on solar collectors into a heat
exchanger tank, and into floor radiant PEX tubing. If or when we get a leak, it will be in the
attic. Hopefully we can catch it early.
Copper’s
biggest advantage is that it can be recycled.
Recycled copper can be used for fine enameled wires, power cables, more
pipes, and element in gun metals, and bronzes.
PVC
Poly-vinyl
chloride, or PVC is an organochlorine. Its manufacturing contributes
dangerous impacts to the environment. The
EPA has increased enforcement against the PVC manufacturing industry, which is
responsible for the majority of our nation’s air emissions of toxic vinyl
chloride (VC). VC,
an odorless gas, is a known human carcinogen, endocrine disruptor, and linked
to neurological disorders.
PVC
pipes are designated with either "NSF-PW" or
"NSF-61" to indicate that the product complies with the health
effects requirements of NSF/ANSI Standard 61 for potable water. This standard also establishes similar
guidelines for other plumbing materials, including copper tubing. If pipe is not coded with one of these
designations or if it is designated with an alternative code such NSF-DWV
(waste pipe) it should not be used for potable water applications. We used some PVC in our pump house and
underground, but I don’t feel good about it.
PEX
PEX, cross-linked polyethylene,
is much less toxic to produce than PVC. PEX
is flexible, resistant to scale and chlorine, doesn't corrode or develop
pinholes, is faster to install than metal or rigid plastic, and has fewer
connections and fittings. PEX plumbing
has been in use in Europe since about 1970, and was introduced in the U.S.
around 1980.
In
California, a PEX environmental impact report (EIR), found that methyl
tertiary-butyl ether (MTBE) and tert-Butyl alcohol can leach from PEX in
amounts that exceed taste, odor and health guidelines set by the State of
California for drinking water. The EIR
also found that PEX can leach ethyl tertiary butyl ether (ETBE), a chemical in
the same family as MTBE. A toxicologist
report commissioned as part of the EIR found that the ETBE leaching from PEX
pipe could contribute to taste and odor impacts, and could potentially lead to
adverse health effects. No serious
adverse health problems are known at this time.
Sunlight can dramatically reduce the
PEX’s resistance to chlorine and result in premature pipe rupture. Care should be taken to keep PEX out of direct
sunlight.
We
used PEX for potable water lines. It’s
easy to install, red tubing for hot, blue for cold, and the expansion type fittings
are tightly secured. PEX is flexible,
expandable, and resists cracking or bursting.
While poorly attached fittings may cause leaks, PEX tubing is highly
resistant to problems as long as installation is performed with integrity.
PEX cannot be recycled. A 2005 report by the San Francisco Department
of the Environment found that PEX was the only type of plastic piping that no
plastic recycler would accept.
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