Guidelines for Canadian Drinking Water Quality: Guideline Technical Document – Asbestos

Guidelines for Canadian Drinking Water Quality: Guideline Technical Document – Asbestos There is no consistent, convincing evidence that ingested asbestos is hazardous. There is, therefore, no need to establish a maximum acceptable concentration (MAC) for asbestos in drinking water. 2021-11-29 Health Canada open-ouvert@tbs-sct.gc.ca Health and SafetyCanadian drinking-water qualitytechnical documentasbestosasbestos in drinking-watermaximum acceptable concentrationhealth risks Guidelines for Canadian Drinking Water Quality: Guideline Technical Document – AsbestosHTML https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/publications/healthy-living/guidelines-canadian-drinking-water-quality-guideline-technical-document-asbestos.html Guidelines for Canadian Drinking Water Quality: Guideline Technical Document – AsbestosHTML https://www.canada.ca/fr/sante-canada/services/publications/vie-saine/recommandations-pour-qualite-eau-potable-canada-document-technique-amiante.html

There is no consistent, convincing evidence that ingested asbestos is hazardous. There is, therefore, no need to establish a maximum acceptable concentration (MAC) for asbestos in drinking water.

Data and Resources

Similar records