Person: Schmoll, Oliver
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Veröffentlichung Implementation and evaluation of the water safety plan approach for buildings(2019) Rapp, Thomas; Rickert, Bettina; Schmidt, Isabelle; Schmoll, OliverThe World Health Organization promotes water safety plans (WSPs) - a risk-based management approach - for premise plumbing systems in buildings to prevent deterioration of drinking-water quality. Experience with the implementation of WSPs in buildings were gathered within a pilot project in Germany. The project included an evaluation of the feasibility and advantages of WSPs by all stakeholders who share responsibility in drinking-water safety. While the feasibility of the concept was demonstrated for all buildings, benefits reported by building operators varied. The more technical standards were complied with before implementing WSP, the less pronounced were the resulting improvements. In most cases, WSPs yielded an increased system knowledge and awareness for drinking-water quality issues. WSPs also led to improved operation of the premise plumbing system and provided benefits for surveillance authorities. A survey among the European Network of Drinking-Water Regulators on the existing legal framework regarding drinking-water safety in buildings exhibited that countries are aware of the need to manage risks in buildings' installations, but experience with WSP is rare. Based on the successful implementation and the positive effects of WSPs on drinking-water quality, we recommend the establishment of legal frameworks that require WSPs for priority buildings whilst accounting for differing conditions in buildings and countries. Quelle: https://iwaponline.comVeröffentlichung Status of small-scale water supplies in the WHO European Region. Results of a survey conducted under the Protocol on Water and Health(World Health Organization. Regional Office for Europe, 2016) Samwel, Margriet; Rickert, Bettina; Shinee, Enkhtsetseg; Kozisek, Frantisek; Schmoll, Oliver; World Health Organization. Regional Office for EuropeSmall-scale systems are an important component of water supplies in the WHO European Region. To improve the evidence base on small-scale water supplies and to gain a better overview of the status quo throughout the Region, the WHO Regional Office for Europe and the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe made a survey requesting country-specific information in 2012-2013 under the Protocol on Water and Health to the 1992 Convention on the Protection and Use of Transboundary Watercourses and International Lakes. The survey had a high response rate (81%), and this analysis of the results includes responses from 43 of the 53 countries in the WHO European Region.
This report summarizes the findings of the survey, which showed that about 23% of the population of the Region receive their drinking-water from small-scale systems. The results reveal that comprehensive information on small-scale water supplies is typically not readily available at the national level across the Region, which hampers systematic assessment of the prevailing conditions. Establishing national registers of small-scale water supplies and routine data collection mechanisms would improve the evidence base and thus support the prioritization of improvements. The findings of the assessment are intended to inform policy-making and the formulation of intervention strategies and to help identify further action under the Protocol.
Quelle: http://www.euro.who.intVeröffentlichung Status of small-scale water supplies in the WHO European Region. Results of a survey conducted under the Protocol on Water and Health(World Health Organization. Regional Office for Europe, 2016) Samwel, Margriet; Rickert, Bettina; Shinee, Enkhtsetseg; Kozisek, Frantisek; Schmoll, Oliver; World Health Organization. Regional Office for EuropeSmall-scale systems are an important component of water supplies in the WHO European Region. To improve the evidence base on small-scale water supplies and to gain a better overview of the status quo throughout the Region, the WHO Regional Office for Europe and the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe made a survey requesting country-specific information in 2012-2013 under the Protocol on Water and Health to the 1992 Convention on the Protection and Use of Transboundary Watercourses and International Lakes. The survey had a high response rate (81%), and this analysis of the results includes responses from 43 of the 53 countries in the WHO European Region.
This report summarizes the findings of the survey, which showed that about 23% of the population of the Region receive their drinking-water from small-scale systems. The results reveal that comprehensive information on small-scale water supplies is typically not readily available at the national level across the Region, which hampers systematic assessment of the prevailing conditions. Establishing national registers of small-scale water supplies and routine data collection mechanisms would improve the evidence base and thus support the prioritization of improvements. The findings of the assessment are intended to inform policy-making and the formulation of intervention strategies and to help identify further action under the Protocol.
Quelle: http://www.euro.who.intVeröffentlichung Gesundes Trinkwasser aus eigenen Brunnen und Quellen(2013) Rickert, Bettina; Schmoll, OliverVeröffentlichung WHO-Kooperationszentrum für Forschung auf dem Gebiet der Trinkwasserhygiene beim Umweltbundesamt(2016) Rickert, Bettina; Schmoll, OliverVeröffentlichung Das Water Safety Plan (WSP)-Konzept für Gebäude(2020) Rapp, Thomas; Rickert, Bettina; Schmidt, Isabelle; Schmoll, Oliver; Zügner, VerenaDas Water Safety Plan (WSP)-Konzept für Gebäude Die Qualität des Trinkwassers in Deutschland ist sehr hoch. Hierfür sorgen die Wasserversorgungsunternehmen bis zur Übergabestelle in das Gebäude. Ab diesem Punkt sind die Gebäudebetreibenden dafür verantwortlich, dass den Verbraucher*innen an den Entnahmestellen sicheres Trinkwasser zur Verfügung steht. Das Water-Safety-Plan-Konzept (WSP) wird zur Anwendung eines risikobasierten Ansatzes von der WHO empfohlen und darüber hinaus als Gebäude-WSP auch für die Anwendung in Trinkwasser-Installationen. Die konsequente Umsetzung des WSP-Konzeptes schützt die menschliche Gesundheit vor wasserbürtigen Gefährdungen durch eine, für die jeweilige Trinkwasser-Installation individuelle, Analyse und die Umsetzung von daraus hergeleiteten Maßnahmen zur Risikobeherrschung. Das Handbuch "Das Water Safety Plan (WSP)-Konzept für Gebäude" bietet Hilfestellung bei der Anwendung des Konzeptes in Gebäuden. Quelle: https://www.umweltbundesamt.de