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News article28 May 2024Directorate-General for Communication1 min read

Europe’s bathing waters remain safe

Two paddle boarders are visible on a lake behind some trees

 

As you prepare for warm summer days ahead, you will be happy to learn that the vast majority - 85.4% - of bathing water sites in Europe met the EU's most stringent ‘excellent' bathing quality standards in 2023. This is according to the annual Bathing Water report which was published today by the European Environmental Agency together with the Commission.

The report focuses on safety for bathing, through monitoring of bacteria which can cause serious illness in people, rather than general water quality. While a large majority met the highest bathing quality standards, almost all - 96% - officially identified bathing waters in the EU met at least the minimum quality standards.  Just 1.5% rated as ‘poor' - 321 out of the 22,081 bathing sites - meaning they were found to pose health risks for swimmers.

Nevertheless, while most of Europe's bathing waters are in excellent condition from a bacteriological perspective, pollution of surface and groundwaters remains significant and may be made worse by the changing climate. Improving water resilience for people and for the environment in coming years will be key.

The Bathing Water Directive, which has helped improve the quality of water since its introduction in 2006, is one of several pieces of EU law that protect water. EU water legislation aims to ensure that all Europeans have access to good quality and sufficient water, and to guarantee the good status of all water bodies across Europe. The centre piece is the Water Framework Directive which, since 2000, represents the main law for water protection in the EU.

For more information

2023 Assessment on Bathing Water Quality, including country fact sheets and interactive map

EU rules on bathing water quality 

EU rules on water

Press Release: Europe's bathing waters remain safe

European Environment Agency: Bathing water quality

Details

Publication date
28 May 2024
Author
Directorate-General for Communication