Swimming in the sea? Find out how clean the water is!

Published: 30 June 2009 y., Tuesday

Paplūdimys pietvakarių Prancūzijoje
When booking a holiday or planning a daytrip many people check out restaurants, sight-seeing and beaches before they leave. What is less well known is that it is also possible to check the quality of bathing water. Under EU law, bathing water has been tested since 1976. Each year the European Commission reports on the quality of bathing water around Europe. This year 96 % of coastal bathing areas and 92 % of bathing sites in rivers and lakes complied with minimum standards in 2008.

The report was prepared by European Environment Agency (EEA) who are making the information  available on their website using maps and tables with detailed information on specific bathing areas (see 1stlink).
 
Of the 21,400 bathing areas monitored throughout the European Union in 2008, two thirds were on the coast and the rest were along rivers and lakes.
 
Safeguards against bacteriological & chemical contaminants
 
The goal of the original 1976 directive on the quality of bathing water aimed to ensure that coastal and inland bathing water doesn't contain  bacteriological or chemical contaminants at levels that could pose health risks. The directive is one of the EU’s oldest environmental laws and has led to the continuous improvement of bathing water quality in Europe. However, after almost 30 years, the directive needed revising to take into account the latest scientific and technical information.
 
A new directive after tough negotiations
 
The new 2006 Bathing Water directive will tighten and simplify health standards for bathing water, improve the management of bathing sites and improve public information. Parliament negotiated ruthlessly with EU ministers for three years for improved health standards.
 
The new law was approved by the Parliament in January 2006 and it should be implemented towards the end of 2014. Twelve Member States however, (Cyprus, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Slovakia, Spain and Sweden) have already monitored their bathing areas during the 2008 bathing season according to the parameters of the new Directive.
 
 
 

Šaltinis: europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Nothing Can Stop the African Woman… Ask Agathe

A baby girl loses her mother at birth. A few years later, she is “sold” into domestic labor by her own father. more »

Morocco Water & Sanitation

Scarce and unevenly distributed rainfall has made water a key economic and social development issue in Morocco. more »

Climate Change in Mauritania: Taking Action before it is too late

Rainfall in August and September 2009 confirmed the fears of serious risk of natural disasters in years to come resulting from rising sea levels, greater erosion of coastal zones, destruction of the mangroves, and devastating floods. more »

International Women's Day – 8 March 2010

Fifteen years after the groundbreaking Fourth World Conference on Women, which was held in Beijing in 1995, the international community has clear legal norms on the prohibition of discrimination and the active promotion of gender equality and women's empowerment. more »

European Commission strengthens its commitment to equality between women and men

Ahead of International Women's Day, the European Commission strengthened and deepened its commitment to equality between women and men with a Women's Charter. more »

World Bank Institute Launches Online Game EVOKE, a Crash Course in Changing the World

The World Bank Institute has launched an online multiplayer game, EVOKE, designed to empower young people all over the world, but especially in Africa, to start solving urgent social problems like hunger, poverty, disease, conflict, climate change, sustainable energy, lack of health care and education. more »

Asylum study backs shared responsibility between EU countries

One of the crucial questions facing EU asylum policy is the extent to which countries share the demands of asylum seekers. more »

Filipino Youth ask: What can I do to address climate change?

Youth in three major universities explored what they can do to address climate change, something that experts in a knowledge-sharing forum in Silliman University in Dumaguete City say is already at Filipinos’ doorsteps. more »

Getting women more involved in European politics

The Parliament needs to connect more with women voters as research shows them to be trapped in a vicious circle, being under-represented in the EP and EU politics in general and, therefore, less interested and less involved than men. more »

Colour festival in India

The streets of India became a kaleidoscope of colour, as locals celebrated Holi. more »