Water for Life 37
How to make water safe for drinking and cooking
It is better to protect and use a source of safe water than to treat water from a
contaminated source, such as a river or water hole. But water will need to be treated
if it has been contaminated, if people refuse to drink it due to color or taste, or if it is
transported and stored in the home. Water from pipes, tanks, and wells should also be
treated before drinking if there is any possibility that it has been contaminated.
The methods you choose to treat water will depend on how much water you need,
what it is contaminated with, how you will store it, and what resources are available.
No matter how it is treated it is best to either let the water settle and pour it into
another container, or filter the water before disinfecting it.
The methods shown here do not make water safe from toxic chemicals. Water with
toxic chemicals is never safe for drinking, bathing, or washing clothes. It may lead
to cancer, skin rashes, miscarriages, or other health problems.
To make water safe from germs, follow these steps:
1. Let the water settle for a few hours and pour it into a clean
container OR filter it, using
Cloth filter ... or ... Charcoal filter
(See pages 38 to 39 for methods to settle and filter water.)
2. Disinfect the water using 1 of these methods:
Charcoal
Thin cloth
Sand
Pebbles
Boiling ... or ... Solar disinfection ... or ...
(See pages 40 to 41 for disinfection methods.)
Adding ... or ... Adding lime or
Chlorine
lemon juice
These basic methods for treating water need little or no equipment. To settle water in
ways that take more time but make it safe from most germs, see page 38, Settling water.
To learn how to make filters to treat larger amounts of water, see page 43, Ceramic
filters, and page 42, Slow sand filters.