{"id":30366,"date":"2021-06-28T18:55:50","date_gmt":"2021-06-28T10:55:50","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/therfiles.com\/?p=30366"},"modified":"2021-08-15T00:30:34","modified_gmt":"2021-08-14T16:30:34","slug":"nsf-certification-residential-drinking-water-treatment-standards","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/therfiles.com\/nsf-certification-residential-drinking-water-treatment-standards\/","title":{"rendered":"NSF Certification – Residential Drinking Water Treatment Standards"},"content":{"rendered":"\t\t
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NSF International is a global independent public health and environmental organization that provides standards development, product certification, testing, auditing, education and risk management services for public health and the environment. It has earned ISO 14001 environmental management system certification, which demonstrates the organization\u2019s overall commitment to environmental stewardship.<\/p>


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NSF developed its first drinking water treatment standard in 1973. Today, they test to seven point-of-use\/point-of-entry (POU\/POE) drinking water treatment standards and have certified thousands of systems and components.<\/p>

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The NSF POU\/POE standards address the wide array of drinking water treatment technologies on the market today, including adsorptive medias, ion exchange, reverse osmosis<\/a>, ceramic filters, pleated filters, ultraviolet (UV), distillation, reduction-oxidation (redox), shower filters and more. Point-of-use (POU) and point-of-entry (POE) systems also include pitchers, faucet mount, counter top, refrigerator, under sink, plumbed-in and sports bottle type filtration systems.<\/p>

Each\u00a0NSF Residential Drinking Water Treatment Standard<\/a>\u00a0sets thorough health requirements and performance criteria for specific types of products. Contaminant reduction claims can be certified under each standard and can vary according to each water treatment technology capability. Systems that utilize more than one treatment technology may be certified under multiple standards.<\/p>

How Do Products Become NSF Certified?<\/b>
To earn NSF certification, water treatment systems must undergo extensive testing to confirm that they meet the strict requirements of American National Standards. In addition to verifying that the system is structurally sound, NSF verifies that:<\/p>