https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/CU0712/S00262/report-highlights-recreational-water-quality.htm
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Report highlights recreational water quality |
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20 December 2007
Media
Statement
Report highlights recreational water
quality
Kiwis heading to favourite coastal holiday spots
this summer can be assured that the vast majority of New
Zealand’s beach swimming areas have water quality that is
suitable for swimming and other water
recreation.
Nationwide data on bacteria levels,
which is collected by councils and health authorities, is
contained in the Ministry for the Environment’s report
Snapshot – recreational water quality in New
Zealand.
“Last summer, more than three quarters
of the 380 monitored coastal swimming spots met New Zealand
bacterial guidelines on almost every occasion they were
sampled. That is good news for the Kiwi tradition of cooling
off in the sea on hot summer days,” said Todd Krieble,
Ministry for the Environment general manager Reporting and
Communications.
However, he says the 2006/07 data
showed fresh water swimming spots on New Zealand’s rivers,
streams and lakes have poorer water quality – 40 per cent
of the 230 monitored had water quality that did not
consistently meet guidelines.
Only 1 per cent of
salt water sites breached the bacterial guidelines
regularly, but this figure rose to 10 per cent at the fresh
water sites.
“The main pollutant of concern to
swimmers is faecal matter. Common sources in our waters
include sewage and storm water discharges and run-off from
farmland and urban areas,” said Todd
Krieble.
“New Zealand’s lowland waterways, and
some heavily populated coastal spots, are particularly
vulnerable to pollution from faecal pollution as agriculture
and urban land use intensifies.”
Improving the
management of land use impacts is a critical factor in
improving water quality. Initiatives such as the Dairying
and Clean Streams Accord – a partnership between the
Ministry for the Environment, Fonterra, and local government
which includes a focus on keeping stock out of streams, and
effluent management – are aimed at bringing about those
improvements.
Recreational water quality is
monitored over the summer by regional councils and health
authorities. These authorities can provide up-to-date
advice on water quality at swimming spots in local areas (a
link to relevant council web pages is provided in the
report).
The report is available on the Ministry
for the Environment
website:
http://www.mfe.govt.nz/state/reporting/recreational-water/index.html
ends