Title: The EU Water Sector Requirements
1The EU Water Sector Requirements
Legislation and Institutional Working Group 25
Oct. 07 Presented by Claire Dupont
Key Legal Expert
2Priorities Linked to the Black Sea
- Euthrophication is one of the priority
environmental issues in the BS region - Sources nutrients and phosphorus loads in the
Black Sea Basin (wastewater, detergents, run-off
from agricultural lands) - Need for reducing the discharge of phosphorus and
nitrogen nutrients into the environment
3Key Relevant Directives
- Key Directives
- Water Framework Directive
- Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive
- Nitrate Directive
- Groundwater Directive
- Other water-related requirements
- Drinking Water Directive
- Bathing Water Directive
- Flood Directive
- Drought Strategy
Selection needed!!
4Brief History of EU Water Law
- First wave of laws (1970s 80s)
- Focus on setting quality standards for water for
specific uses - Surface Water for Drinking Water Abstraction 1975
- Bathing Water 1976
- Fish Water 1978
- Shellfish Water 1979
- Drinking Water 1980
- Ground Water 1980
- Only emission control element found in Dangerous
Substances Discharged to Water 1976 - No regulation of water quantities
5Brief History of EU Water Law
- Second wave of laws (1990s)
- Introduction of emission controls
- Urban Waste Water Treatment 1991
- Protection of Water from Nitrate Pollution 1992
- Integrated Pollution Prevention Control 1996
- Protection of human health New Drinking Water
Directive 1998 - Current policy - Water Framework Directive (2000)
- Requires integrated water management by river
basins - Recognises need for a combined approach, i.e.,
emission controls water quality standards
6Water Framework Directive (1)
- Directive 2000/60/EC establishing a framework
for Community action in the field of water
policy - Establishes a framework for the protection of all
waters (inland surface waters, transitional
waters, coastal waters groundwaters) in a
single instrument - Does not cover Drinking Water or Bathing Water
which remain separate regimes on account of their
high public health component
7Water Framework Directive (2)
- Key Article 4 environmental objectives
- Member States are to carry out programmes of
measures with the aim of achieving, by 2015 - For surface waters -- good chemical ecological
status - For groundwater -- good chemical quantitative
status - For protected areas compliance with EU
standards objectives
8Water Framework Directive (3)
- Two concepts involved in good chemical
ecological status in surface waters - Good Surface Water Ecological Status has to
meet Annex 5 criteria elements of morphology,
biology hydrology varying for the surface water
type (e.g., river, lake). Status is defined
relative to pristine sites, Annex provides for
nature degree of ecological distortion for
different types of surface water - Good Surface Water Chemical Status where
pollutant concentrations do not exceed
Environmental Quality Standards set in existing
daughter directives, under priority substances
list in any other EU law (IPPC, UWWT, Nitrates
etc.)
9Water Framework Directive (4)
- Similar requirements for groundwater
- Member States shall implement the measures
necessary to prevent or limit the input of
pollutants into groundwater and to prevent the
deterioration of the status of all bodies of
groundwater - Member States are to protect, enhance restore
all bodies of groundwater, ensure a balance
between abstraction and recharge.. - Reverse any significant and sustained upward
trend in the concentration of pollutants
resulting from human activities
10Water Framework Directive (5)
- Implementation Timetable for Member States
- By end 2003, identify all river basins in
national territory assign them to river basin
districts - By end 2003, competent authorities must be
appointed for all river basins - By end 2004, completed
- Analysis of the characteristics of each river
basin district - A review of impact of human activity on the water
- An economic analysis of water use
11Water Framework Directive (6)
- Implementation Timetable for Member States
(continued) - By end 2004, a register of areas needing special
protection under specific EU legislation - Protection of surface waters
- Protection of groundwater
- Conservation of habitats
- All bodies used for abstraction of water for
human consumption - Annex IV gives details on how to characterise
monitor RBs
12Water Framework Directive (7)
- By end 2006, operational water monitoring
programmes - By 2009, Management Plans for each river basin
district, with Programme of Measures that meet
Article 4 objectives - Prevent deterioration of surface water, achieve
good chemical ecological status, reduce
pollution from hazardous substances - Protect groundwater, prevent pollution
deterioration, ensure a balance between
abstraction recharge - Preserve protected areas
- By 2015, achievement of objectives in management
plans
13Water Framework Directive (8)
- River Basin Management Plans (RBMP)
- Must have programme of measures to achieve good
status objectives - Must have certain basic measures, including
- Implementation of existing EU law on point
diffuse pollution (IPPC, UWWT, Priority
Substances) - Promotion of efficient sustainable water use
- Prior authorisation for abstraction recharge of
surface groundwater, incl. registers of water
abstraction
14Water Framework Directive (8)
- River Basin Management Plans (RBMP)
- Basic measures - continued
- Prior regulation or authorisation with emission
controls for point source discharges - Measures to prevent or control diffuse pollution
- Measures to prevent pollution by priority
substances - All appropriate measures to reduce the risk to
aquatic ecosystems
15Water Framework Directive (9)
- Article 4(3) (6) Derogations
- Some provisions allowing relaxation of status,
objectives time-scales for their achievement - But justification for any derogation must be
published in the RBMP reviewed every 6 years - Public information and consultation requirements
- MS must involve the public in the production,
review and updating of River Basin Management
Plans
16Decision 2455/2001 (Priority Substances)
- List of substances considered to present a
significant risk to or via the aquatic
environment - Linked to obligation in Water Framework Directive
to take Community-level measures aimed at the
progressive reduction and for priority
hazardous substances at the cessation or
phasing out of discharges, emissions, losses by
2020 - Proposed Directive setting limits on
concentrations in surface waters of 41 dangerous
chemical substances - Will repeal 5 older directives (daughter
directives under Directive 76/464/EEC)
17Moldova Current Status
- Draft law in advanced preparation
- Need to develop secondary legislation
- Points for discussion
- Timing for adoption
- Which secondary legislation is needed
- Coordination with development of other related
water legislation - Main stakeholders (Ministry of Ecology and
Natural Resources, Ministry of Health, Centre of
Preventive Medicine, Agency Apele Moldovei,
Hydrometeorological Service, State Ecological
Inspectorate, AGeoM Agency, Cadastre Agency )
18UWWT Directive (1)
- Directive 91/271/EEC on urban wastewater
treatment - Objective
- To protect the environment from any adverse
effects from discharge of UWW wastewater from
certain industrial sectors - Applies to
- Urban waste water from households (collection
treatment) - Industries that produce biodegradeable effluents
similar to domestic sewage in excess of 4000
person equivalents (p.e.) - Industrial waste discharged to sewers
19UWWT Directive (2)
- Key requirements
- All communities above 2000 p.e. (person
equivalents) must install adequate - Sewage collection systems
- Treatment systems for the sewage collected
- Collection treatment systems are to be
installed by a series of deadlines which depend
on - The size of the agglomeration
- Whether it discharges into sensitive waters
20UWWT Directive (3)
- Discharges from UWWT plants must meet emission
limit values (ELVs) set in Annex 1 (BOD, COD,
total suspended solids) - Primary secondary treatment is required in
order to meet these ELVs - Primary treatment by a physical or chemical
process involving settlement of suspended solids - Secondary generally biological treatment
- Where UWW is discharged to sensitive waters (at
risk of eutrophication), additional tertiary
treatment (nutrient removal) may be required
21UWWT Directive (4)
- Investment requirements
- The most costly environmental Directive to
implement - UWW collection treatment is usually the
function of local government, so municipalities
local water companies will need to finance
construct necessary infrastructure - Smaller communities have particular difficulty
with financing - 35 billion investment required in new MS (EU-10
EU-2) - Transition periods have been granted
22UWWT Directive (5)
- Competent Authorities must give prior regulation
or specific authorisation for - Industrial waste water discharges (must be
pre-treated) - Disposal of waste water from UWWT plants
- Biodegradeable industrial waste water discharges
23Moldova Current Status
- Very limited wastewater treatment capacity
- Water supply and sanitation strategy (role of the
future National Water Facility) - Points for discussion
- Strategic framework
- Timing
- Main stakeholders (e.g. role of Agency Apele
Moldovei, Agency for Construction and
Territorial Development, local governments etc. )
24Nitrate Directive 91/676 (1)
- To reduce or prevent water pollution caused by
nitrates from agricultural sources (diffuse
sources) - Designed to protect drinking water supplies and
prevent euthrophication of freshwater and marine
waters - MS have to identify
- Surface waters groundwater affected or which
could be affected by nitrate pollution, in
accordance with the procedure and criteria set in
the Directive - Nitrate Vulnerable Zones (NVZ)
- Establish Codes of Good Agricultural Practice
(GAP) to be implemented by farmers on a voluntary
basis
25Nitrate Directive 91/676 (2)
- Implement action programmes in vulnerable zones
(on individual NVZ or part of zones) - Alternatively, MS may not designate NVZ but
establish and apply an action programme through
the whole territory - Action programmes include mandatory measures
manure storage, spreading e.g. limit the
spreading on land of any fertiliser containing
nitrogen and set limits for the spreading of
livestock effluents - NVZ and effectiveness of action programmes are to
be reviewed each 4 years - Monitor surface and groundwater quality against a
maximum limit of 50 mg NO3/l.
26Moldova Current Status
- Key issue given the weight of agriculture in
Moldova economy and extent of related
environmental impacts - Any on-going project (WB?)
- Any planned legislation?
- Points for discussion
- Nitrate / Groundwater Directives
- Timing
- Main stakeholders
27Groundwater Daughter Directive (1)
- Linked to WFD requirements
- Define groundwater bodies within RBD to identify
those in risk of not achieving WFD objectives - Registers of protected areas within each RBD e.g.
under Nitrates Directive - Groundwater monitoring networks programmes
- Include groundwater status in RBMP
- Establish measures to control groundwater
extraction, artificial recharge or augmentation
of groundwater bodies subject to prior
authorisation - Direct discharges of pollutants into groundwater
prohibited
28Groundwater Directive (2)
- Repeals Directive 80/68/EC by December 2013 but
the same level of protection should be maintained
or strengthened - Sets up procedure and criteria for assessing
groundwater chemical status based on - quality standards (e.g. 50 mg/l for Nitrates)
- threshold values to be established by each MS for
key pollutants including those listed by the
Directive (by Dec.08) at national or RBD level
29Groundwater Directive (3)
- Requires MS to identify and reverse significant
and sustained upwards trends in concentrations of
pollutants - Requires MS to take measures to prevent or limit
inputs of pollutants into groundwater, so that
WFD environmental objectives can be achieved by
2015
30Moldova Current Status
- Groundwater pollution is a serious concern
- Points for discussion
- Nitrate / Groundwater Directives
- Timing
- Main stakeholders