Europe’s fresh water bathing areas improve, but little change in coastal waters

The report says repeated pleas for more attention to Europe’s 4,376 fresh water bathing areas have produced “encouraging” results for the third year in a row. In 1996, one out of three fresh water zones was insufficiently monitored or did not meet the minimum quality requirements. In contrast, just above 90% of the fresh water bathing areas respected the minimum requirements of the Directive during the 1999 bathing season.

The percentage of insufficiently sampled fresh water beaches decreased further to 3.2%. The Commission says it hopes that the next season will finally show that all freshwater bathing areas will be sufficiently sampled.

The picture is less encouraging for Europe’s 11,435 seaside beaches and coastal bathing areas: while more than 95% respect the minimum quality requirements, this is only a marginal improvement compared with results in the previous report.

Now that the majority of coastal bathing waters respect the minimum requirements of the Directive, the European Commission says it hopes that Member States will aim at a higher compliance with the stricter guide values.

The report says that further improvement in coastal bathing water quality cannot be achieved through local initiatives only. Action, the report says, must be taken on the basis of a more integrated approach to water management.

“A legal act is only as good as its implementation,” said the European Commissioner for Environment, Margot Wallström, presenting the report. “EU legislation on Bathing Water has produced results: bathing water quality has progressed considerably over the years. But there is still scope for improvement. This year’s report also shows that Member States cannot rest on their laurels. Constant vigilance and effort are necessary to preserve good water quality results from one year to the next. Member States should not only aim for compliance with the minimum requirements of the Bathing Water Directive. They should be more ambitious and put more effort achieving the higher, stricter quality requirements.”

Results for fresh water bathing areas:

Results for coastal bathing areas