Summary of the NJDEP's Nitrate Dilution Model and Application - NJ 2025

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The natural level of ammonia or nitrate in surface water is typically low (less than 1 mg/L); in the effluent of wastewater treatment plants, it can range up to 30 mg/L.
Nitrite concentration in WWTPs is very low under normal conditions (around 0.1 mg/l). Increased concentrations are usually an indication of a disturbance of microbiological processes, of an overloaded plant or insufficient aeration capacity.
Allowable levels in bottled water: Nitrate 10 mg/L (as nitrogen) Nitrite 1 mg/L (as nitrogen)
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) standard for nitrate in drinking water is 10 milligrams of nitrate (measured as nitrogen) per liter of drinking water (mg/L). * Drinking water with levels of nitrate at or below 10 mg/L is considered safe for everyone.
application. fieldsgroundwater movement. Untreated sewage flowing into a municipal wastewater facility has total nitrogen concentrations ranging from 20 to 85 mg/L. The nitrogen in domestic sewage is approximately 60 percent ammonia nitrogen, 40 percent organic nitrogen, and small quantities of nitrates.
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Because nitrite is easily oxidized to nitrate, nitrate is the compound predominantly found in groundwater and surface waters. Contamination with nitrogen containing fertilizers (e.g. potassium nitrate and ammonium nitrate), or animal or human organic wastes, can raise the concentration of nitrate in water.

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