National Recommended Wafer Quality Criteria ------- PAGE NOT AVAILABLE DIGITALLY ------- BACKGROUND Under the United States Clean Water Act (CWA) (33 U.S.C. Sections 125 I-I 387), EPA is required to take a number of actions to protect and restore the ecological integrity of the Nation’s water bodies. One particular action required under Section 304(a) of the CWA is the development and publication of water quality criteria. Water quality criteria are levels of individual pollutants, water quality characteristics or descriptions of condi- tions of a water body that, if met, should protect the des- ignated use(s) of the water. Designated uses of a water body are such things as: swimming, drinking water source, fishing, fish spawning, navigation and others. States and authorized tribes establish designated uses for their water bodies. Water quality criteria are recom- mended guidance that states and tribes use as part of their water quality standards. WHAT ARE WATER QUALITY CRITERIA? There are three principle categories of water quali- ty criteria: criteria to protect human health, criteria to protect aquatic life and criteria to protect wildlife. Within these broad categories, there are different types of criteria. For example, within the human health cate- gory there are chemical-specific, microbiological and physical criteria. Within the aquatic life category, there are chemical-specific, toxicity, biological, sediment and physical criteria. Water quality criteria developed under Section 304(a) are based on data and scientific determinations on the relationship between pollutant concentrations and environmental and human health effects. Section 304(a) criteria do not consider social and economic impacts nor the technological feasibility of meeting the chemical concentration values in ambient water. Economic and technical feasibility factors are consid- ered by states and tribes when they adopt water quality criteria into their water quality standards under CWA Section 303(c) and when states, tribes, and EPA consid- er requests for relaxing specific permit limits for regula- tory controls. Moreover, states and tribes may consider other scientifically-defensible approaches when they adopt criteria into their water quality standards. These approaches and criteria may be different from the ones that EPA publishes under Section 304(a). ------- Water quality criteria are expressed in either narrative or numeric form. Criteria may also be developed to app’y generally within a State, or to site-specific situations. Numeric criteria are values expressed as the amount of a pollutant per liter of water (or levels for physical charac- teristics). Narrative criteria are written descriptions of how a water body and its aquatic life or habitat should be. Narrative criteria are often expressed as “free from” and are usually used as the basis for controlling nuisance con- ditions such as objectionable floating debris or deposits. States and tribes establish narrative criteria where numer- ic criteria cannot he established or to supplement numeric criteria. Numeric criteria are important because they provide a proven effective tool for programs that implement the CWA. For example, numeric criteria are often the basis for setting National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) water quality-based permit limits for point source dischargers and for establishing a Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) for a water body as a whole. Numeric criteria are also useful non-point source pollution assess- ment and management tools. CWA SECTION 304(A) STATES: “The Administrator thai! develop and publish, (and from time to time thereafter revise) criteria for water quality accurately reflecting the latest sd- entjfic knowledge (A) on the kind and extent of all identUlahie effects on health and welfare including, but not limited to, plankton, fish, shellfish, wilt/lift, plant life, shorelines, beaches, esthetics! and recre- ation which may he expected from the presence of pollutants in any body qf water; including ground water; (B) on the concentration and dispersal of pollutants, or their byproducts, through biological, physical, and chemical processes; and (C) on the effects of pollutants on the biological community divercity, productivity, and stability, including in for- mation on the factors affecting rates of eutrophica- tion and rates of organic and inorganic sedimenta- tion for varying types of receiving waterc.” ------- Numeric criteria to protect aquatic life from toxic chemicals are expressed as short-term and long-term concentrations in order to reflect toxicological and real world conditions as accurately as possible. The combi- nation of a Criterion Maximum Concentration (CMC), over a one-hour acute duration (a short-term average acute limit), and a Criterion Continuous Concentration (CCC), over a four-day chronic duration (a long-term average chronic limit) provide protection of aquatic life against both short and long-term effects. Recommended averaging periods are relatively short because events higher than the average can kill or cause substantial damage in short periods of time. Frequency limitations are specified in both acute and chronic criteria. The recommended chronic criteria or Criterion Continuous Concentration (CCC) is based on a once in a three year period chemical concentration, coupled with a four-day chronic averaging period, that approximately corresponds to a once-in-ten year, seven- day-average low flow (7Q10). The acute criteria or Criterion Maximum Concentration (CMC) is also based on a once in a three year period chemical concentration, coupled with a one hour averaging period, that approxi- mately corresponds to the historically used criterion concentration that is expected to occur in a once-in-ten year one-day-average low flow (1 QI 0). Numeric criteria to protect human health are expressed as daily concentrations that, if not exceeded, will protect against noncancer health effects over the course of a lifetime or against exceeding an acceptable incremental increase in the rate incidence of cancer. Noncancer effects that the criteria protected against may be acute, chronic or subchronic, or health effects depending on the basis of the Reference Dose (RID) value. The RID is always derived to protect against the most sensitive health endpoint measured. WHAT’S IN THIS BROCHURE? This brochure contains EPA ’s most recent numeric or narrative chemical-specific water quality criteria designed to protect aquatic life and human health from pollutants and physical stressors that are, or may be, harmful when introduced into or imposed on water bod- ies. The criteria listed in the table cover approximately 1 50 pollutants. ------- Office of Water Office of Science and Technology Health and Ecological Criteria Division (4304T) I tfl:e , , ‘ c bflO i jy /tpp/ving •Scit,ut’ ( 1 1 1 ( 1 J()( I:noli’çv to Protect Wa ler Qua! liv www. epa.gov/waterscience PROGRAM CONTACTS Heidi Bell (202) 566-1089 Denis Borum (202) 566-1090 Luis Cruz (202) 566-1095 Charles Delos (202) 566-1097 Frank Gostomski (202) 566-1105 Tala Henry (202) 566-1323 Mary Reiley (202) 566- 1123 Treda Smith (202) 566-1128 William Swietlik (202) 566-1129 j tO 1 ) :3 CD = 0 0 CD 0 — 4 - 0 CD p 0 0 0 ) — I CD ------- sr 6 q 1 L PRO t U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of Water Office of Science and Technology Health and Ecological Criteria Division (4303T) 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Washington, D.C. 20460 To: ------- |