EPA vs. Sodium Bromide: The Real Story Part 2 of 2
The sodium bromide debate in the pool industry often gets reduced to a scary word: bromate. But the real conversation is about exposure, how regulators model risk, and what happens when guidance is built on limited field data. Pool service professionals have used sodium bromide based algaecide products for decades, especially for stubborn yellow algae, and many were blindsided by the EPA-driven label language that says “not for use in outdoor pools.” That label shift sparked fear at distributors and on service trucks, even though the product remains legal to purchase. The bigger issue is how pool chemistry, real-world dosing, and actual human exposure differ from worst-case assumptions. A key scientific point raised is that bromate does not automatically equal harm at any detectable level, especially when exposure is tiny. The discussion leans on research suggesting the stomach’s hydrochloric acid can rapidly reduce a large share of trace bromate back into bromide, which is far less co...