Waterlink websitesOur Websites
   

Water Hygiene Training

The need for water hygiene is simple. It is to ensure that any quality of water when used appropriately is safe.

This can cover a wide range of uses from the obvious, that water for drinking is safe, through to understanding the risks associated with water and air conditioning systems

A summary of water hygiene

Water hygiene requirements and legislation

Water hygiene training

The need for a recognised Water Hygiene course

Energy and Utility Skills (EU Skills), working with the water industry has developed the National Water Hygiene Scheme as a national standard to replace the existing individually established Hygiene standards and procedures developed and set by water companies.

Now, it is possible for an individual to show that they have been trained to a nationally recoginsed level. Thus avoiding the need to prove their skill level when moving between water companies. In addition, people working outside the water utility industry, are able to show that they have a nationally recognised skill.

Heat Pumps

Waterlink are investigating the use of boreholes for ground source heat pumps. Our long term experience in the delivery of boreholes for local private water sources can be applied to the growing use of ground source heat pumps providing a solution that takes up a far smaller area, is quicker to implement and potentially available to a far larger number of people, in particular those who want to use an alternative form of heating but do not have a large area of land to dig up to lay the“Ground loop heat exchanger” which is commonly used for domestic applications.

  Website links: SouthEastWater - Solar water heating - pesticide residue testing - water testing - solar energy pv - energy map - lenham