Water Framework Directive
Water Framework Directive
Water Framework Directive
EN
Water supports life. It is a crucial resource for humanity, generating and sustaining economic growth and prosperity. It is also at the core of natural ecosystems and climate regulation. Europes water is under pressure. Recent gures show that 20% of surface water is at serious risk from pollution; 60% of European cities over-exploit their groundwater resources; 50% of wetlands are endangered. Demand for water is growing all the time. Three-quarters of Europeans get their supply from groundwater, locked in the Earth. Nearly half the EU population lives in water-stressed countries, where the abstraction of water from freshwater sources is too high. River basin management plans are the key tools for implementing the WFD. They are drawn up after extensive public consultation, and are valid for a six-year period.
through a coordinated strategy involving all the interested parties in decision-making. The river basin approach is the best way to manage water. This is the thinking behind the Water Framework Directive. Member States have had to draw up river basin management plans (RBMPs) to safeguard each one of the 110 river basin districts. Public participation is a fundamental principle, so European citizens are playing an inuential role in planning and implementing the WFD measures.
Fact 3: Waters must achieve good ecological and chemical status, to protect human health, water supply, natural ecosystems and biodiversity
The denition of ecological status looks at the abundance of aquatic ora and sh fauna, the availability of nutrients, and aspects like salinity, temperature and pollution by chemical pollutants. Morphological features, such as quantity, water ow, water depths and structures of the river beds, are also taken into account. The WFD classication scheme for surface water ecological status includes ve categories: high, good, moderate, poor and bad. High status means no or very low human pressure. Good status means a slight deviation from this condition, moderate status means moderate deviation, and so on. The EU now has more than 100 000 surface water bodies: 80% of them rivers, 15% lakes and 5% coastal and transitional waters. The same river can contain dierent water bodies, since the status of the water may change. The diagram below applies to a river with high-quality water at its source, which gradually becomes more polluted downstream.
Fact 2: EU action is necessary because river basins and pollution cross borders. The river basin approach is the best way to manage water
Rivers do not stop at national frontiers they ow on through dierent countries to reach the sea. All EU Member States apart from islands like Cyprus and Malta share waters with neighbouring countries. A river basin or a catchment covers the entire river system, from the sources of small tributaries to the estuary, including its groundwater. The EU and the Member States have divided the river basins and associated coastal areas into 110 river basin districts, 40 of which are international and cross borders, covering about 60% of EU territory. Isolated measures to improve water quality cannot be successful without taking account of what happens upstream and downstream. Integrated river basin management adopts a holistic approach to protecting the whole body of water, its source, tributaries, delta and river mouth,
High status
Good status
Moderate status
To dene good chemical status, environmental quality standards have been established for 33 new and eight previously regulated chemical pollutants of high concern across the EU. The WFD is backed up by other EU legislation such as the REACH regulation on chemicals and the Directive for Integrated Pollution and Prevention Control (IPPC) for industrial installations. The rules for groundwater are slightly dierent and good chemical and quantitative status is the objective. Member States must use geological data to identify distinct volumes of water in underground aquifers, and European law limits abstraction to a portion of the annual recharge. Groundwater should not be polluted at all any pollution must be detected and stopped.
Fact 6: Water management is linked to many policies: integration is the only way forward for sustainable water
Water is involved in a huge range of human activities, and therefore in the policies applied to regulate them. For example: Water is vital for agriculture, farming and livestock. Since 1985, the area of irrigated land in southern Europe has gone up by 20%. Agriculture is the main consumer of water.
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Decisions about land-use and development are inuenced by the availability of water resources and facilities for wastewater disposal. Energy generation uses water for cooling and other purposes. Much of it is returned to water courses after use. Industry uses water for the manufacturing processes, while many other sectors of the economy, such as tourism, impact on water resources. Water is indispensable for healthy ecosystems, which themselves underpin our quality of life. It is not only a provisioning service a basic material but also plays a part in the regulating services that govern climate and weather and keep our planet functioning. For example, wetlands provide services such as water purication and carbon absorption, which in economic terms are worth billions of euro. Therefore, good water management has to be integrated into all these areas, while the WFD takes account of all aspects of water use and consumption. The WFD is a framework for EU water policy and is complemented by other legislation regulating specic aspects of water use: The Groundwater Directive (2006) The Environmental Quality Standards Directive (2008) Two Commission Decisions (2005 and 2008), on ecological status, established a register of almost 1 500 sites included in an intercalibration exercise to allow for comparison of dierent countries standards, and published the results. Previous and related legislation includes: The Urban Wastewater Directive (1991) The Nitrates Directive (1991) The new Bathing Water Directive (2006) The Drinking Water Directive (1998) More recent related legislation expanding the scope of integrated water management: The Floods Directive (2007) The Marine Strategy Framework Directive (2008)
Fact 7: A changing environment creates challenges for the future, including climate change, oods and drought
Since 2000, new factors, such as accelerating climate change and the economic crisis, have come into play. In the coming years, climate change will pose a major challenge for water management across the EU. It is likely to bring: Lower rainfall and higher summer temperatures in the south, putting stress on scarce resources. The Commissions 2007 Communication on Addressing the challenge of water scarcity and droughts nds that implementing the WFD will be crucial. More rain and a higher ood risk in the north. Floods are already becoming increasingly frequent: since 1990, 259 major river oods have been reported, 165 of them since 2000. The 2007 Floods Directive adopts a new, proactive approach, requiring Member States to prepare preliminary ood risk assessments for all river basin districts by 2011, followed up in 2013 by ood hazard maps. By 2015, Member States should have ood risk management plans, ready to link into the next cycle of RBMPs (2016-2021). In the view of this, public involvement will be crucial to meet the goals of the WFD as well as the Floods Directive. Yet large numbers of Europeans are still unaware of their right to have a say on the future of water. It is important to communicate that every eort makes a dierence. Consultations on the next cycle of river basin management plan preparation together with consultations on the preparation of ood risk management plans should start by the end of 2012.
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Useful resources:
Commission homepage on EU water policies and links to river basin management plans: http://water.europa.eu/policy Water notes: http://ec.europa.eu/environment/water/participation/notes_en.htm WFD implementation reports 2007 and 2009: http://ec.europa.eu/environment/water/water-framework/implrep2007/index_en.htm Maps and graphs: http://ec.europa.eu/environment/water/water-framework/facts_gures/index_en.htm Plunge into the debate consultations and local RBMPs: http://water.europa.eu/participate Common Implementation Strategy: http://ec.europa.eu/environment/water/water-framework/objectives/implementation_ en.htm CIRCA: http://circa.europa.eu/Public/irc/env/wfd/library?l=/&vm=detailed&sb=Title WISE: Water Information System in Europe: http://water.europa.eu European Environment Agency water: www.eea.europa.eu/themes/water