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HAVANT BOROUGH COUNCIL SEA WATER SAMPLING PROGRAMME
Contact:
Environmental Health, Environment
Team;
Civic Offices, Civic Centre Road, Havant,
Hampshire, PO9 2AX
Telephone: (023) 9244
6670
Email:
ippc@havant.gov.uk
Staff from the Environmental Health and
Housing Service take samples of seawater from different locations
every fortnight throughout the year. These samples are taken to the
Public Health Laboratories for analysis. Tests carried out
determine the number and types of indicator bacteria present in the
water sample.
Between May and the end of September (the official bathing season)
the level of monitoring is increased when seawater samples are also
taken by the
Environment Agency. All samples are tested to find the number
of bacteria present and to determine whether the seawater complies
with the European
Community Directive on Bathing Water Quality (Directive
76/160/EEC).
Click on the links below for bathing waters
sampling results, and additional information on algal blooms:
View Water Quality
Standards >>
Bathing Season Water
Quality Summary (2008), includes links to previous years)
>>
BATHING BEACH AWARDS
Havant Borough Council has been granted
several prestigious awards for its bathing beaches on Hayling
Island. These include the European Blue Flag, the Solent Water
Quality Award and the Yellow Flag of the Tidy Britain Group. We
were particularly fortunate to receive two Blue Flags in 1999 and
three in 2000. This is due to continued improvement in the
management of the Boroughs beaches and marinas.
- West Beachlands central, which runs from Hayling Island's
funfair to the Inn on the Beach, received a seaside award (Yellow
Flag) and has kept the European Blue Flag since 1992.
- In 1999 an additional Blue Flag had been granted for the beach
which runs from the Inn on the Beach to Hayling Island Golf
Course.
- In the year 2000 another Blue flag was granted to Northney
marina making a total of three for the year 2000.
- The Borough has received three blue flags each year since.
The Solent Water Quality Award which began in 1993 and covers
recreational waters, has been granted to Hayling Island seafront
every year to date. This is one of only eight beaches in
the Solent area where the award applies throughout the year rather
than during the bathing season only. The award applies to the beach
from Sandy Point to the West Winner on Hayling Island.
EC BLUE FLAG AWARDS

The European Blue Flag for bathing beaches is
administered by the Tidy Britain Group and is partly funded by the
Department of the Environment, Farming
and Rural Affairs (DEFRA). It is valid for a period of one year
and must be reviewed annually.
To be eligible for the Blue Flag, a bathing
beach must fulfil all the requirements of the award including:
- Meeting the water quality guideline standards of the European
Community Bathing Water Directive 76/160/EEC.
- Absence of industrial or sewage discharges affecting the beach
area.
- Absence of any gross pollution on the beach and intertidal
areas from sewage related or other waste including glass and
litter.
- Absence of discharge of industrial or urban waste.
- Absence of algal or other vegetation materials accumulating or
decaying.
- Absence of oil pollution.
- High management levels covering emergency plans, disabled
access, public telephones, drinking water, toilet facilities,
buildings and equipment maintenance and general cleanliness.
EUROPEAN COMMUNITY BATHING WATER
DIRECTIVE
The EC
Bathing Water Directive (Directive 76/160/EEC) contains
extensive provisions regarding quality standards in coastal waters.
The Directive lays down bacteriological and other quality
standards, prescribes a surveillance regime and obliges EC Member
States to take the necessary measures to ensure that bathing waters
conform to these standards.
- Seawater at EC beaches must be sampled at weekly intervals
between 1 May and the end of September.
- A minimum of 20 samples must be collected for analysis to
determine the number of (coliform) bacteria.
- All samples must be taken at predetermined points off the beach
where the daily average density of bathers is at its highest.
- To comply with the standard given in the Directive there must
be no more than 10,000 coliform bacteria per 100ml of seawater in
total and no more than 2,000 faecal coliforms per
100ml.
- To comply with the Directive, 95% of samples taken from bathing
water must meet these standards ( i.e. only one failure is
permitted).
- The EC Bathing Water Directive also includes guideline
standards, which are more stringent than the mandatory standards,
and member states should strive to meet them. The guideline
standards are that 80% of the samples must not exceed 500 total
coliforms per 100ml or 100 faecal coliforms per 100 ml and 90% of
the samples must not exceed 100 faecal streptococci per 100ml.