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EU Water Rules Get a Boost: Stronger Limits, Faster Response

Published February 18, 2026

Goal: Protect water, simplify law

This resolution updates EU water laws to add stricter limits on pollutants, improve monitoring and reporting, and make rules easier to enforce, aiming to protect people and ecosystems.

Environment

Commission communication to the European Parliament – 18 Feb 2026 (COM 2026/39 final)

The Commission reports the Council’s position on a new water‑policy directive that amends three existing EU water directives (2000/60/EC, 2006/118/EC, 2008/105/EC).

Key dates

  • Proposal sent to Parliament and Council: 22 Oct 2022 (COM 2022/0540)
  • European Economic and Social Committee opinion: 22 Feb 2023
  • Parliament’s first‑reading position: 24 Apr 2024
  • Council’s position adopted: 17 Feb 2026
  • Political agreement reached: 23 Sep 2025

Objectives of the proposal

  1. Protect EU citizens and natural ecosystems by adding new pollutants and stricter quality standards for groundwater and surface water.
  2. Make the law more effective and reduce administrative work so the EU can respond faster to new risks.

Main points of the Council’s position (supported by the Commission)

Area What changed Numbers / details
Substances & quality standards • Two substances (atrazine, trichlorobenzene) moved from EU‑wide to national concern lists. • Review of complex families (pharmaceuticals, pesticides, bisphenols, PFAS) postponed; further work to be done before next review. • Groundwater pharmaceuticals: individual standards for each substance; stricter standards where sensitive ecosystems exist. • Groundwater ecosystems: Member States must set stricter limits where evidence shows an ecosystem is present. • Non‑relevant pesticide metabolites: keep 1 µg/L middle value, total 5 µg/L; Member States may set stricter limits. • Surface‑water pesticides: 0.2 µg/L for a subset of ~30 pesticides. • PFAS: surface water 0.0044 µg/L for 25 PFAS (24 + TFA); groundwater 0.0044 µg/L for 4 most hazardous PFAS; a less strict 20‑PFAS sum aligned with the Drinking Water Directive; TFA to be considered in a future review.
Monitoring & reporting • More frequent data reporting; delete interim progress reports. • EEA becomes a one‑stop shop for data; ECHA supports future watch‑list updates. • Mandatory watch‑list monitoring for groundwater; streamlined procedure for surface water. • Microplastics and antimicrobial‑resistance genes to be added to watch lists when methods are ready. • Two‑year mandatory effect‑based monitoring of endocrine disruptors; technical specs to be set by an implementing act. • Emissions inventories to be reported only once, via the Industrial Emissions Portal. • Maps and progress indicators to be developed with Member States and the EEA. • Joint Monitoring Facility to be assessed for voluntary support. • Extended Producer Responsibility assessment to be carried out.
Transboundary cooperation Immediate notification of extreme floods, droughts or accidental cross‑border pollution; ensure cooperation.
Access to justice Introduce Aarhus‑Convention‑style access to justice for water‑policy actions (good status, programmes, river‑basin plans).
Legislative procedure Keep ordinary legislative procedure for future amendments; maintain a 20‑year phase‑out timetable for hazardous substances.
Delegated vs implementing acts Most proposals accepted as delegated acts; harmonised reference values for biological quality elements will be implementing acts.
Non‑deterioration clause & exemptions • Define “deterioration of status” per EU Court of Justice. • Two exemptions: 1. Temporary deterioration – requires pre‑ and post‑assessment (1 year for chemical, 3 years for biological). 2. Relocation of pollutants – allowed if the receiving water body is already in poor chemical status, no drinking‑water impact, and no better alternatives.
Deadlines • Transposition deadline: 21 Dec 2027 (next river‑basin plan cycle). • Compliance for new substances: end 2039, with possible extension to end 2045.

Conclusion
The Commission accepts the Council’s position at first reading and supports the agreed changes to strengthen EU water protection while keeping the legislative process clear and manageable.

Licensing: The summaries on this page are available under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0).

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