Bathing water – significant improvement in quality of fresh water zones

At a press conference held on the launch of this report, the Commissioner for the Environment Ritt Bjerregaard said: “My repeated plea for more attention to the vulnerable fresh water bathing areas start to show consistently encouraging results. While during the 1996 bathing season one out of three fresh water zones did not respect the minimum quality requirements. Now two seasons later, more than 86% of the fresh water bathing areas respect the minimum requirements of the Directive.”

Coastal bathing areas

On average, the mandatory quality of coastal bathing areas is only improving marginally. The Commission says it seems as though they have reached their maximum achievable compliance rate: almost 95% of the coastal bathing areas in the European Union meet the minimum standards. However, the Commission says it now would expect countries to do their utmost also to meet the more stringent guide values. Only about 84% have reached these high quality standards.

The weather conditions for certain regions in the EU during the 1998 bathing season, with periods of heavy rainfall, were not always favourable for achieving good results. This is reflected in some of the individual results, but overall the results are said to be encouraging.

Fresh water bathing areas

The percentage of insufficiently sampled fresh water beaches fell again, to 5.5%. The Commission says this still represents a very high number and hopes that the next season will finally show that all fresh water bathing areas will be sufficiently sampled.

As for coastal waters, the weather conditions for certain regions in the EU during the 1998 bathing season, with periods of heavy rainfall, were not always favourable for achieving good results. This is reflected in some of the individual results, but overall results are, again, described as encouraging.

Despite the encouraging results, the Commission says a lot still needs to be done for fresh water bathing zones. Commissioner Bjerregaard therefore reiterated her plea and encouraged everyone, governments, environmental associations and individual citizens to put a big effort into improving the quality of fresh water zones.

Now that the majority of coastal bathing waters meet the minimum requirements of the Directive, the Commissioner hopes that Member States will continue their efforts and will now aim at a higher rate of compliance with the stricter guide values.