When chlorine is added to water, it forms a weak acid, called hypochlorous acid, that knocks out bacteria like salmonella and E. coli, as well as germs that cause diarrhea, swimmer’s ear and other ailments.
It effectively tears apart a pathogen and breaches its cell walls.
According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a properly chlorinated pool should also kill the coronavirus, though there hasn’t been a great deal of research into it.
‘Based on what we know about chlorine and other viruses, it is likely safe to be swimming in a properly maintained pool, provided you continue to observe rules of social distancing and proper hand hygiene’ said Dr. Cristina Cicogna, an infectious disease specialist.
That may help explain why chlorine supplies are running out across the US: In summer 2020, as most Americans were forced to hunker down at home, many passed the time by taking a dip.
Chlorine prices jumped 37 percent in March, according to Yahoo! Finance, and the shortage could see prices climb another 60 percent from June to August.
Making matters worse, BioLab, one of the biggest chlorine manufacturers in the country, burned down in August in the wake of Hurricane Laura.
Residents in Lake Charles, Louisiana, were ordered to stay in their homes to avoid contact with the dangerous chemical fumes.
BioLab won’t be back up and running until spring 2022, CNBC reported.
That leaves just two manufacturers, Occidental Petroleum and Clearon, providing chlorine tablets for the whole country.
The result is what experts are calling the worst chlorine shortage in US history.
Some suppliers have started limiting how much customers can buy.
The pandemic has even led to a shortage of plastic buckets to put the tablets in.
Allan Curtis, who runs Ask the Pool Guy in Brighton, Michigan, says this is the first time in his 34 years in business that he’s had to resort to stockpiling chlorine.
″[I expect pool owners] will have to go from tablets to powdered chlorine, from powdered chlorine to liquid chlorine, from liquid chlorine to non-chlorinated shocks and things,’ Curtis told CNBC.
‘And I do believe that all of those are going to literally run out,’ said Curtis, who expects to run out by late May.
Scotty Heer, a pool-service operator in Las Vegas, told CNBC a $75 bucket of chlorine is now going for $140, ‘with the proposed price of $158 in the near future.’
There are approximately 8.4 million swimming pools in the United States, according to ForRent.com, and nearly two-thirds of them use chlorine tablets.
SOURCE: Daily Mail