The goal of restoring the « good status » of water bodies, both underground and surface, by 2027 will not be achieved.

Vue aérienne de l’Oise et de la Seine, en août 2019.

European countries will not be able to restore the « good status » of their water bodies, both underground and surface, by 2027. This goal, set by the Water Framework Directive in 2000, will not be met, according to a report published by the European Commission on Tuesday, February 4. This document, which concludes a six-year monitoring and measurement cycle, reports modest improvements across Europe compared to the previous assessment, but the overall picture remains bleak. « Our waters are polluted, our water supply is at risk, » summed up the new European Commissioner for the Environment, Jessika Roswall, during a press conference.

More than half of surface water bodies – rivers, lakes, etc. – are in a « very critical » state, according to data provided by member states for the year 2021. The « good ecological status, » assessed based on biological, physicochemical, and hydromorphological criteria (flow, width of the water body, etc.), is only met for 39.5% of these bodies. Additionally, only 26.8% of these surface water bodies are considered in good chemical condition (compared to 33.5% in 2015). Most others have concentrations exceeding standards for certain pollutants, including mercury and nitrates, primarily from agriculture.

Source: Le Monde

Une réaction ?
0Cool0Bad0Lol0Sad