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24. November 2009
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EU-Strände (nicht so) sauber, so Kommission[en][fr

Erschienen: Montag 12. Juni 2006   

In ihrem Jahresbericht stellt die EU-Kommission fest, dass 96 % der europäischen Küstengewässer sauber genug sind, um darin baden zu können. Allerdings bezichtigt sie einige EU-Mitgliedstaaten des Schummelns.

The Commission's annual reportexternal on the state of Europe's bathing waters is generally upbeat with 96% of coastal bathing sites considered clean under the EU's bathing waters directive, which dates back to 1976. 

But the report came with a warning about member states' increasing tendency to remove beaches from the official lists, a practice that the Commission says is used "to mask pollution problems and artificially improve compliance results". 

The 2006 report is even less encouraging for inland freshwater bathing sites, with compliance rates falling to 85.6%, down from 89.4% in 2004 and 92.4% in 2003.

In April this year, the Commission launched legal action against eleven member states (Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain and Sweden), for removing a total of 7,000 bathing sites from their official lists to escape EU legislation. 

"Removal of bathing sites from the official lists should be properly and individually explained and should not be a response to pollution problems," the Commission said, adding that explanations for the removal of previously recognised bathing sites were currently lacking.

A updated version of the bathing waters directive was agreed in January this year. It will apply as of 2015 (EurActiv 20 Jan. 2006).

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