Well, then, why not dump a vial of poison into a holding tank? Once again, it sounds really good in a movie, but the science of it just doesn’t work out.
Consider a simplified example involving a typical 10,000 gallon holding tank. According to the Merck Index, it takes 300 milligrams of sodium cyanide to kill the average person. Barring other variables, it would take a minimum of 105 pounds of this poison to fill the tank in a proportion great enough to cause harm, much less death.
OK. So you can carry 100 pounds and so can a strong terrorist. Doesn’t that mean that we still have to worry about poison in a holding tank?
Probably not. See, most of the water in that holding tank is not going to be ingested by the city’s population. Think about how much water you drink from the faucet. Then, consider how much water goes in pools, washes your cruiser, feeds the lawn, runs baths, etc., and the picture becomes more clear.
Unless the Bad Guys can steal a tanker of poison and dump the entire load unnoticed into the tank, the odds of poisoning a small segment of a community, much less an entire system, is slim.