-

Metropolitan Wins Silver for Best Tasting Tap Water in United States

This year’s honor marks the eighth medal earned by Metropolitan

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Tap water served by the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California is among the best-tasting in the nation, a panel of judges has determined as part of the 36th annual Berkeley Springs International Water Tasting competition, which included more than 100 entries of water sourced from five continents.

Metropolitan garnered second place in the municipal water category – the eighth medal the agency has won in the international competition in recent years.

“Metropolitan water quality and treatment staff work hard to ensure the water we deliver not only meets all water quality standards, but also consistently tastes good. While safety is always our top priority, for consumers good taste can be an important confirmation of water quality,” Metropolitan General Manager Shivaji Deshmukh said.

In its earlier entries into the international competition, Metropolitan won first place in 2021, 2008 and 1998; second place in 2022, 2003, and 2000; and third place in 2005.

Metropolitan’s 2026 silver-medal water was a blend of water imported from the Colorado River, via Metropolitan’s Colorado River Aqueduct, and from the northern Sierra, via the State Water Project, and then treated with a state-of-the-art ozone process at the F.E. Weymouth Water Treatment Plant in La Verne. As it leaves the plant, the water receives a small amount of chlorine disinfection to ensure its continued quality and safety throughout the distribution system.

Ozone treatment, used at all five of Metropolitan’s water treatment plants as part of the rigorous treatment process, destroys a wide variety of microorganisms and effectively removes unpleasant tastes and odors. To ensure water quality, Metropolitan routinely tests its water to confirm it meets or surpasses stringent federal and state drinking water regulations that protect public health. Every year, the agency tests its water for almost 400 constituents and performs about 250,000 water quality tests.

Water from the Weymouth plant is distributed via gravity-flow to Metropolitan’s member agencies in Los Angeles and Orange counties. The facility has a treatment capacity of 520 million gallons a day and is co-located with Metropolitan’s world-renowned Water Quality Laboratory.

To help ensure Metropolitan delivers great-tasting water, the Water Quality Lab houses Metropolitan’s Flavor Profile Analysis panel, a group of employees specially trained in the quality-control methods of the food and beverage industry. The panel meets several times weekly to evaluate samples from throughout the district’s regional treatment and distribution system to maintain quality.

Contacts

Rebecca Kimitch, (213) 217-6450; (202) 821-5253, mobile; rkimitch@mwdh2o.com
Maritza Fairfield, (213) 217-6853; (909) 816-7722, mobile; mfairfield@mwdh2o.com

Metropolitan Water District of Southern California


Release Versions

Contacts

Rebecca Kimitch, (213) 217-6450; (202) 821-5253, mobile; rkimitch@mwdh2o.com
Maritza Fairfield, (213) 217-6853; (909) 816-7722, mobile; mfairfield@mwdh2o.com

More News From Metropolitan Water District of Southern California

Metropolitan Issues Statement on Increased State Water Project Allocation

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Metropolitan Water District General Manager Shivaji Deshmukh issues the following statement on the California Department of Water Resources’ increase of the State Water Project allocation to 45%: “Despite low snowpack in the Northern Sierra, the Department of Water Resources has been able to take advantage of good runoff conditions and additional precipitation last month to capture more water in Lake Oroville. Metropolitan will continue to strategically manage this...

New Director Representing the City of Los Angeles Joins Metropolitan Board of Directors

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sustainable food and water policy leader Paula Daniels was seated Tuesday as the City of Los Angeles’ newest representative on the board of directors of the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California. Daniels has spent more than two decades working to advance public policy on food systems and sustainability in the government, academic and non-profit sectors. She is currently the inaugural executive director of the Los Angeles County Office of Food Systems,...

Metropolitan Issues Statement on Lower Basin Plan for Near-Term Colorado River Operations

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Metropolitan Water District General Manager Shivaji Deshmukh issues the following statement regarding the revised Lower Basin proposal for Colorado River operations through 2028, submitted today to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. “Metropolitan has been working for more than a year toward building a consensus among all Colorado River water users for post-2026 operations, to improve both sustainability and certainty on the river. Unfortunately, all seven states have...
Back to Newsroom