Table of Contents:
Water protection and management
Outline of the Community (European Union) legislation about Water protection and management
Topics
These categories group together and put in context the legislative and non-legislative initiatives which deal with the same topic.
Environment > Water protection and management
Water protection and management
Some 70% of the Earth’s surface is covered by seas and oceans, and these produce almost three quarters of the oxygen we breathe. We can use directly only 1% of this water, however, and many forms of human activity put water resources under considerable pressure. Polluted water, whatever the source of the pollution, flows one way or another back into our natural surroundings – into the sea or water tables – from where it can have a harmful effect on human health and the environment. One of the most important pieces of legislation in this area is the Water Framework Directive.
GENERAL FRAMEWORK
- Water protection and management (Water Framework Directive)
- Pricing and long-term management of water
- Flood management and evaluation
- Droughts and water scarcity
- Urban waste water treatment
SPECIFIC USES OF WATER
- Quality of drinking water
- Bathing water quality (until 2014)
- Bathing water quality
- Water suitable for fish-breeding
- Quality of shellfish waters
MARINE POLLUTION
- Strategy for the marine environment
- Maritime safety: compensation fund for oil pollution damage
- Maritime safety: prevention of pollution from ships
- Ship-source pollution and criminal penalties
- Maritime safety: prohibition of organotin compounds on ships
- Maritime safety: Bunkers Convention
REGIONAL WATERS
- European Union Strategy for Danube Region
- Baltic Sea Strategy
- Environment strategy for the Mediterranean
- Strategy to improve maritime governance in the Mediterranean
- Black Sea Synergy
- Danube – Black Sea region
Regional convention
- Barcelona Convention for the protection of the Mediterranean
- Helsinki Convention on the protection of the Baltic Sea
- Helsinki Convention: trans-boundary watercourses and international lakes
- Convention for the Protection of the Rhine
- OSPAR Convention
DISCHARGES OF SUBSTANCES
- Industrial emissions
- Integrated pollution prevention and control (until 2013)
- Environmental quality standards applicable to surface water
- Protection of groundwater against pollution
- Detergents
- Stockholm Convention on persistent organic pollutants (POPs)
- Agricultural nitrates
- Community strategy concerning mercury
- Protection of the aquatic environment against discharges of dangerous substances (until 2013)
- Other substances: protection of groundwater
Another Normative about Water protection and management
Topics
These categories group together and put in context the legislative and non-legislative initiatives which deal with the same topic
Water protection and management (Water Framework Directive)
Document or Iniciative
Directive 2000/60/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 October 2000 establishing a framework for Community action in the field of water policy [See amending acts].
Summary
The European Union (EC) has established a framework for the protection of:
- inland surface waters *;
- groundwater *;
- transitional waters *; and
- and coastal waters *.
This Framework-Directive has a number of objectives, such as preventing and reducing pollution, promoting sustainable water usage, environmental protection, improving aquatic ecosystems and mitigating the effects of floods and droughts.
Its ultimate objective is to achieve “good ecological and chemical status” for all Community waters by 2015.
Administrative arrangements
Member States have to identify all the river basins * lying within their national territory and to assign them to individual river basin districts *. River basins covering the territory of more than one Member State will be assigned to an international river basin district.
Member States are to designate a competent authority for the application of the rules provided for in this Framework-Directive within each river basin district.
Identification and analysis of waters
By 2004 at the latest, each Member State shall produce:
- an analysis of the characteristics of each river basin district;
- a review of the impact of human activity on water;
- an economic analysis of water use;
- a register of areas requiring special protection;
- a survey of all bodies of water used for abstracting water for human consumption and producing more than 10 m³ per day or serving more than 50 persons.
This analysis must be revised in 2013 and every six years thereafter.
Management plans and programmes of measures
In 2009, nine years after the Framework-Directive entered into force, management plans were produced for each river basin district, taking account of the results of the analyses and studies carried out. These plans cover the period 2009-2015. They shall be revised in 2015 and then every six years thereafter.
The management plans must be implemented in 2012. They aim to:
- prevent deterioration, enhance and restore bodies of surface water, achieve good chemical and ecological status of such water by 2015 at the latest and to reduce pollution from discharges and emissions of hazardous substances;
- protect, enhance and restore the status of all bodies of groundwater, prevent the pollution and deterioration of groundwater, and ensure a balance between groundwater abstraction and replenishment;
- preserve protected areas.
The management plans for river basin districts can be complemented by more detailed management programmes and plans for a sub-basin, a sector or a particular type of water.
Temporary deterioration of bodies of water is not in breach of the requirements of this Framework-Directive if it is the result of circumstances which are exceptional or could not reasonably have been foreseen and which are due to an accident, natural causes or force majeure.
Member States shall encourage participation by all stakeholders in the implementation of this Framework-Directive, specifically with regard to the management plans for river basin districts. Projects from the management plans must be submitted to public consultation for at least 6 months.
From 2010, Member States must ensure that water pricing policies provide adequate incentives for users to use water resources efficiently and that the various economic sectors contribute to the recovery of the costs of water services, including those relating to the environment and resources.
Member States must introduce arrangements to ensure that effective, proportionate and dissuasive penalties are imposed in the event of breaches of the provisions of this Framework Directive.
A list of priority substances selected from among the ones which present a significant risk to the aquatic environment has been drawn up at European level. This list is set out in Annex X to this Framework-Directive.
Key terms used in the act |
---|
|
References
Act | Entry into force – Date of expiry | Deadline for transposition in the Member States | Official Journal |
---|---|---|---|
Directive 2000/60/EC |
22.12.2000 |
22.12.2003 |
OJ L 327 of 22.12.2000 |
Amending act(s) | Entry into force | Deadline for transposition in the Member States | Official Journal |
---|---|---|---|
Decision 2455/2001/EC |
16.12.2001 |
– |
OJ L 331 of 15.12.2001 |
Directive 2008/32/EC |
21.3.2008 |
– |
OJ L 81 of 20.3.2008 |
Directive 2009/31/EC |
25.6.2009 |
– |
OJ L 140 of 5.6.2009 |
The successive amendments and corrections to Directive 2000/60/EC have been incorporated in the original text. This consolidated versionis of documentary value only.
AMENDMENT OF ANNEXES
Annex X – List of priority substances in the field of water policy
Directive 2008/105/EC [Official Journal L 348 of 24.12.2008].
Related Acts
Communication from the Commission of 22 March 2007 – Towards sustainable water management in the European Union – First stage in the implementation of the Water Framework Directive 2000/60/EC [COM(2007) 128 final – Not published in the Official Journal].
In this report the Commission sets out the results provided by the Member States concerning the application of the Water Framework Directive. Among other things, it mentions that there is a considerable risk that several Member States will fail to meet the targets set in the Framework Directive, in particular because of the physical deterioration of aquatic ecosystems, especially as a result of overexploitation of water resources and disturbing levels of pollution from diffuse sources. The Commission also indicates that there have been problems with meeting the deadline for incorporating the Framework Directive into national law and shortcomings in the actual transposition process in some cases. However, the establishment of river basin districts and the designation of the competent national authorities seem to be well under way, although progress does still need to be made with regard to international cooperation in some instances. The Commission also indicates that there are considerable differences in the quality of the environmental and economic assessments made in respect of river basins as well as shortcomings in the economic analyses carried out. The Commission finishes by making a number of recommendations to the Member States with a view to making good the shortcomings reported, integrating sustainable management of water into other national policies and making the most of public participation, and gives advance notice of what it plans to do in future in the context of European water management policy.
Report from the Commission of 1 April 2009 published in accordance with article 18.3 of the Water Framework Directive 2000/60/EC on programmes for monitoring of water status [COM(2009) 156 final – Not published in the Official Journal].
Water Protection and Management in other Legal Encyclopedias
Klamath Basin Water Supply Enhancement Act of 2000 – American Legal Encyclopedia
Coastal Zone Management Act Of 1972 in the American Legal Encyclopedia