A record number of England’s official swimming spots have failed to meet water quality standards for bathing this year, figures have revealed.
In 2024, 450 bathing waters in England, including 27 new sites regularly used by swimmers during summer, were tested for water pollution.
Of these, 37 did not meet the minimum standard – including 18 of the newly designated sites – and were classified as having ‘poor’ quality water harmful to human health.
In Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, three beaches were classified as ‘poor’ while five spots on the Yorkshire coast were given the lowest water quality rating.
According to the ratings, 95 per cent of coastal waters met minimum standards this year, compared to just 53 per cent of inland sites, including rivers and lakes.
Areas of the River Thames, River Cam, River Avon and River Severn all failed to meet the standard for swimming based on samples.
Results showed that only two designated bathing water sites on the River Thames – Wallingford Beach and Wolvercote Mill Stream – both scored ‘poor’ for water quality due to high levels of E coli.
“Further action is needed to improve bathing water quality” said the Environment Agency following this year’s figures released on Tuesday (26 November).
The regulator takes readings of harmful E coli bacteria and intestinal enterococci in the water throughout the bathing season between May and September.
The previous four years of readings then determine the annual quality rating for that area of water.
These are classified into four categories – ‘poor’, ‘sufficient’, ‘good’ and ‘excellent’.
Factors which influence bathing water quality can include tides and “physical or environmental changes at a site”, said the Environment Agency.
The number of ‘poor’ bathing waters in 2024 – 8.2 per cent – is the highest since the four-tier system was adopted in 2015.
Figures show that of the bathing waters measured, 413 (91.8 per cent) met at least the minimum standard of bathing water regulations based on 7,420 taken samples, with 85 per cent being rated as ‘good’ or ‘excellent’.
Last year, 96 per cent of bathing water sites met the minimum standard of ‘sufficient’, and 90 per cent met the highest two standards.
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