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  • Disinfectant Type by City - British Columbia, Canada

    City Disinfectant Type Latest Source
    Abbotsford Chloramine Abbotsford Annual Water Quality Report
    Armstrong Chlorine Armstrong Water System Annual Report
    Burnaby Chlorine Burnaby Drinking Water Quality Annual Report
    Campbell River Chlorine Campbell River Municipal Water System 
    Castlegar Chlorine Castlegar Annual Water Quality Report
    Chilliwack Chlorine Chilliwack Annual Water Quality Report
    Colwood Chloramine Greater Victoria (Colwood) Drinking Water Quality Annual Report
    Coquitlam Chlorine Coquitlam Drinking Water Quality Update
    Courtenay Chlorine Courtenay Annual Drinking Water Quality Report
    Cranbrook Chlorine Cranbrook Annual Water Report
    Dawson Creek Chlorine

    Dawson Creek Water Quality Source Identification Report

    Delta Chlorine Delta Drinking Water Quality Report
    Duncan Chlorine Duncan Key Drinking Water Parameters
    Enderby Chlorine Enderby Drinking Water Annual Report
    Fernie Chlorine Fernie Municipal Water Source Information
    Fort St. John Chlorine Fort St. John Water Distribution System
    Grand Forks Chlorine Grand Forks Annual Water Report
    Greenwood Neither - Chlorination System Under Implementation (1–2 Years) Email confirmation from the City of Greenwood (Dec. 2025)
    Kamloops Chlorine Kamloops Drinking Water Annual Report
    Kelowna Chlorine

    Kelowna Annual Water and Filtration Deferral Report

    Kimberley Chlorine Kimberley Annual Drinking Water Report
    Langford Chloramine Greater Victoria (Langford) Drinking Water Quality Annual Report
    Langley Chlorine Langley Water Quality Annual Report
    Maple Ridge Chlorine Maple Ridge Drinking Water Quality Report
    Merritt Chlorine Merritt Community Water System Annual Report
    Nanaimo Chlorine Nanaimo Annual Water Quality Report
    Nelson Chlorine Nelson Annual Drinking Water Report
    New Westminster Chlorine New Westminster Water Quality Monitoring Report
    North Vancouver Chlorine North Vancouver Drinking Water Quality Annual Report
    Parksville Chlorine Parksville Annual Water Report
    Penticton Chlorine Penticton Water Treatment Annual Report
    Pitt Meadows Chlorine Pitt Meadows Drinking Water Quality Report 
    Port Alberni Chlorine Port Alberni Finished Water Quality Parameters Report
    Port Coquitlam Chlorine Greater Vancouver (Port Coquitlam) Annual Water Quality Report 
    Port Moody Chlorine Port Moody Annual Water Quality Report Summary 
    Powell River Chlorine Haslam Lake Water Treatment (Serving Powell River) Water System Extension Feasibility Study
    Prince George Chlorine Prince George Annual Water System Report
    Prince Rupert Chlorine Prince Rupert Annual Water Report
    Quesnel Chlorine Quesnel Annual Drinking Water Report
    Revelstoke Chlorine Revelstoke Annual Water Report
    Richmond Chlorine Richmond Annual Water Quality Report Summary
    Rossland Chlorine  Rossland Annual Water Report
    Salmon Arm Chlorine Salmon Arm Water Collection and Treatment Report
    Surrey Chlorine Surrey Water System Annual Report
    Terrace Chlorine Terrace Annual Water System Report
    Trail Chlorine Trail Public Utilities Water Quality Report
    Vancouver Chlorine Vancouver Annual Water Quality Report
    Vernon Chlorine Greater Vernon Water Quality Monitoring Report 
    Victoria Chloramine  Greater Victoria (Victoria) Drinking Water Quality Annual Report
    West Kelowna Chlorine West Kelowna Annual Water Report
    White Rock Chloramine White Rock Annual Water Quality Report
    Williams Lake Chlorine Williams Lake Drinking Water Quality Annual Report

    Understanding the data - Chlorine & Chloramine

    The disinfection of city drinking water is a two-part process. Step one, usually called primary disinfection, is the process where a city treats the water it draws from the environment to destroy all pathogenic organisms - bacteria, cysts, viruses, etc.  For the vast majority of cities in Canada, this is accomplished using free chlorine. Free chlorine is an aggressive oxidizer and essentially destroys the tissues of these organisms and kills them.

    But just killing the organisms at the water extraction point isn't enough. This water now has to travel through thousands of kilometres of pipe to reach every home in the city. To ensure that the treated water isn't contaminated on its journey, the city adds a residual disinfectant that travels with the water as it's distributed.

    When we talk about Chlorine vs. Chloramine we're talking about the choice of the residual disinfectant. Most cities in Canada still use chlorine as the residual, but more and more cities are making the move to Chloramine. Why?

    Simply put - Chloramine persists in the water longer than Chlorine. It's a more stable molecule and won't naturally dissipate into the air or aggressively react with every compound or surface it comes into contact with. This means that chloramine added at the source is much more likely to be present at the point of use - your home. More persistence = better disinfection = safer citizens.

    But the stability of chloramine also makes it a lot hard to remove from water than chlorine. Both compounds are removed well using activated carbon, but chloramine removal necessitates the use of a special type of activated carbon called catalytic carbon.

    Here at Aquatell, we sell multiple different systems that can be used for the removal of chlorine and chloramine. These systems fall into two broad groups - systems that treat the water for your whole home, and those that treat the water for a single dispensing point (these are usually called point-of-use systems).