Sensors and Systems
-->
Breaking News
Meet the Main Stage speakers for GEO Business 2025
Rating12345GEO Business, the UK’s leading geospatial event, returns to...
Unifly acquires EuroUSC Italia
Rating12345 Unifly’s acquisition of EuroUSC Italia marks another step...
Trimble Announces Dimensions Australia, Expanding Access to Flagship User Conference Experience
Rating12345 Event Highlights Innovation in Connected Construction and Geospatial...
  • Mar 2, 2012
  • Comments Off on Environment: Commission Asks Poland to Correctly Transpose Legislation Concerning Water Monitoring
  • Environment
  • 586 Views

March 2nd, 2012
Environment: Commission Asks Poland to Correctly Transpose Legislation Concerning Water Monitoring

  • Rating12345

Poland has not yet complied with EU legislation on water protection, including monitoring of water quality. On the recommendation of Environment Commissioner Janez Potočnik, the Commission is sending an additional reasoned opinion to ask Poland to correctly implement the EU’s Water Framework Directive (WFD). This is the third time Poland has been reminded of the need to comply with EU water legislation and if Poland fails to reply within one month, the Commission may refer the case to the EU Court of Justice.

The Water Framework Directive is Europe’s key tool for protecting its waters. Article 8 of the Directive obliges Member States to gauge the health of their surface waters and groundwater through national monitoring programmes, so that the status of waters can be established and any corrective measures can be properly targeted. Poland’s deadline to transpose the Directive expired in May 2004, but at this time it had not adopted laws to meet the Directive’s requirements in a number of areas, including water quality monitoring.

The Commission sent Poland a letter of formal notice in June 2008. As Poland’s reply and corrective actions did not cover all of the Commission’s concerns, the letter was followed by a reasoned opinion in June 2010. In response, Poland revised its water legislation in March 2011, and also adopted a new law on monitoring surface and ground waters in November 2011. But the new Polish legislation has created further instances of non-compliance, leading the Commission to send Poland an additional reasoned opinion.