The first Communication and the two reports published today by the new Commission show how water policies can be a source of green and blue economic growth, with water management technologies at the heart of eco-innovation.
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The EU Water Framework Directive sets a framework at European level that aims to ensure clean water in sufficient quantities for people and nature, and for use in economic sectors such as agriculture, aquaculture, energy, transport and tourism. The policy has helped develop a dynamic, world-leading water sector that includes 9,000 active SMEs and provides almost 500,000 jobs in Europe. But this growth needs to be supported by better policy implementation to achieve sustainability and environmental objectives.
The findings of today’s Communication are part of an in-depth look at how Member States are implementing EU water legislation. They come with a series of recommendations designed to encourage, for example, better water pricing, controls on water abstraction, industrial plants, and action on pollution from agriculture. Greater uptake of under-used EU funds is also recommended.
EU legislation has improved water protection. Problems of quantity and quality are being addressed. As a result most Europeans can safely drink tap water and swim in thousands of coastal areas, rivers and lakes across the EU. Flood risks have been largely mapped, and plans to manage these risks are progressing. But warning lights are also flashing: decades of degradation and ineffective management mean that good environmental quality for all EU waters is still some way distant. This in turn generates extra costs for water purification, and risks endangering human health.
Particular problems include excessive abstraction for irrigation around the Mediterranean and Black Sea, widespread nutrient pollution from agriculture, and changes to river flow as a result of poorly planned hydropower or flood protection, or measures to encourage navigation.
While significant investments are still required in many areas, an overview of the 2007-13 financing period shows that Member States have not exploited available EU funding to support water objectives, for instance to treat waste water or to reduce flood risks by restoring flood plains and wetlands.
Background
Despite some good progress, nearly half of EU surface waters are unlikely to reach good ecological status in 2015 acentral objective of EU water legislation. Gaps in monitoring the chemical status of surface waters are particularly significant, with the status of over 40 % of water bodies unknown.
Today’s Communication is accompanied by two background documents that analyse the implementation of the EU Water Framework and Floods Directives around the EU and provide specific recommendations to all Member States. Five more reports assess the River Basin Management Plans of Member States which were not part of the Commission assessment conducted in 2012.
The Commission recommendations to improve Member states implementation of water policies will be presented by Commissioner Karmenu Vella on 23-24 March in Brussels, at the 4th European Water Conference. The conference is part of the Commission’s contribution to World Water Day (22 March), which is devoted to water and sustainable development.