Time for EU Member States to implement the Water Framework Directive for real
The Water Framework Directive (WFD) is an ambitious and innovative piece of legislation that must not be weakened. This was the main message conveyed at a conference held in the European Parliament on the 29th of January where anglers, scientists, policy-makers, NGOs and industry representatives discussed the status of the Directive and exchanged views on what is needed to achieve the WFD targets.
The conference, chaired by MEP Ricardo Serrão Santos, was organised by the Forum on Recreational Fisheries and Aquatic Environment, supported by the European Anglers Alliance (EAA) and the European Fishing Tackle Trade Association (EFTTA).
Mark Owen, Head of Freshwater at Angling Trust, speaking on behalf of EAA and the Living Rivers Europe1 coalition, stressed that the lack of implementation by the Member States is the problem, not the Directive. “We think that the WFD is super. We like it! We do not want it changed. What we do want is for it to be implemented by the Member States”, he said.
Veronica Manfredi, Director at the European Commission, acknowledged that EU waters are still affected by a series of pressures and notably pollution coming prominently from agriculture and transport, some sources of energy production as well as microplastics and pharmaceutical residues. To address these issues, the European Commission will publish a report in a few weeks time, which will include country specific recommendations. In this respect, funding has been identified as a persistent problem undermining the proper implementation of the WFD.
The conference was concluded by a lively debate during which the panellists generally praised the WFD as an excellent piece of legislation that could dramatically improve the status of EU waters if implemented correctly and some of them advised against any modification to its approach, standards and targets. While the WFD should be maintained as it is, policy-makers were urged by several speakers to improve stakeholders’ involvement and ensure better integration of water management aspects into relevant sectoral policies and specifically, agriculture, energy, flood risk management and transport.
The WFD is the most comprehensive instrument of EU water policy and one of the most important pieces of EU environmental legislation. Adopted in 2000, the Directive aims to achieve good status of Europe’s freshwater bodies by 2027 at the latest. The European Commission is currently carrying out an evaluation, or “Fitness Check”, of the WFD to assess whether the current water policy framework is adequate and fit for purpose to address the challenges faced by European freshwaters and to look at the future of the Directive for the time beyond 2027.
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Presentation:
Pictures:
From left to right: Prof. Laurence Carvalho (NERC Centre for Ecology & Hydrology), Mark Owen (European Anglers Alliance), MEP Ricardo Serrão Santos and Veronica Manfredi (Director, DG Environment, European Commission).
From left to right: Janet Doyle (EFTTA), Prof. Laurence Carvalho (NERC Centre for Ecology & Hydrology), Mark Owen (European Anglers Alliance), MEP Ricardo Serrão Santos Veronica Manfredi (Director, DG Environment, European Commission) and Fred Bloot (European Anglers Alliance).
From left to right: Bruno Guillaumie (European Mollusc Producers Association),
Nenad Peric (COPA-COGECA),
Martin Schönberg (Eurelectric),
Katarina Mulec (Balkan River Defence) and
Fulvia Cojocaru( Romanian Permanent Representation).
From left to right: Janet Doyle (EFTTA), Fulvia Cojocaru( Romanian Permanent Representation), Nenad Peric (COPA-COGECA), Prof. Laurence Carvalho (Centre for Ecology & Hydrology), Martin Schönberg (Eurelectric), Fred Bloot (European Anglers Alliance), MEP Ricardo Serrão Santos, MEP Mark Demesmaeker, Katarina Mulec (Balkan River Defence), Mark Owen (European Anglers Alliance), Veronica Manfredi (European Commission).
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Living Rivers Europe” is made up of five international environmental NGOs: the European Anglers Alliance (EAA), the European Environment Bureau (EEB), the European Rivers Network (ERN), the Wetlands International European Association (WI-EA) and the WWF, European Policy Office (WWF EPO). The platform was launched in 2017 to closely monitor the evaluation process of the EU’s Water Framework Directive.
CONFERENCE
The Water Framework Directive Fitness Check and the protection of EU waters
29 January 2019
18:30 - 20:00
European Parliament
MEP Ricardo Serrão Santos will chair a conference entitled “The Water Framework Directive Fitness Check and the protection of EU waters" organised by the European Parliament Forum on Recreational Fisheries and Aquatic Environment, with the support of the European Anglers Alliance (EAA) and the European Fishing Tackle Trade Association (EFTTA).
The event will take place on the 29th of January in the European Parliament (room A5G1) from 18:30 to 20:00.
The Water Framework Directive (WFD) is the cornerstone of European Union water policy. The WFD’s main objective is to protect and enhance the status of aquatic ecosystems and promote sustainable water use. However, there is growing concern that the objective of good status, or higher, in all EU waters by 2027 is a long way from being achieved in many countries.
An evaluation of the WFD is ongoing to assess whether the current regulatory framework is ‘fit for purpose’. In this regard the European Commission has launched a public consultation which closes on 4 March 2019.
The aim of the conference is to bring key stakeholders, scientists and legislators together to share facts and views on the current status of the WFD.
Among the speakers environmental NGOs, including the European Anglers Alliance, will make the case that the WFD indeed is fit for purpose. They argue that no changes to the current regulatory framework are needed, but that the Member States need to speed up the implementation of existing provisions as most of them are behind schedule.
To register please send an email to marta@eaa-europe.eu by the 21st of January 2019.