Directive 91/676/EEC of 12 December 1991, known as the Nitrates Directive, aims to protect the quality of water by preventing pollution of groundwater and surface water by nitrates of agricultural origin, in particular by promoting the use of good agricultural practices for the management of nitrogen. Its guidelines are widely reflected in the Water Framework Directive (WFD) 2000/60/EC of 23 October 2000. It requires Member States to:
• conduct monitoring campaigns for nitrate concentrations in aquatic environments (surface and groundwater) at least every four years;
• designate specific protection areas affected or threatened by pollution by nitrates of agricultural origin, so-called vulnerable zones;
• drawing up action programmes, the measures of which must be applied by farmers operating in vulnerable areas;
• establish good agricultural practices (nitrogen fertilisation, land management) to be implemented voluntarily by farmers.
In France, the implementation of the Nitrates Directive began in 1992 with the first monitoring campaign: nitrate concentrations are then measured at around 3,000 sites (known as measuring stations) located in or near agricultural areas. The results made it possible to establish the first delimitation of vulnerable areas in 1997. Four additional campaigns followed (1997-1998, 2000-2001, 2004-2005 and 2010-2011).
The measuring stations selected to study the evolution of concentrations in areas subject to agricultural pressures are then those which are common with the last campaign under the Nitrates Directive.
This dataset corresponds to the results of the national monitoring programme, carried out under the WFD, of the stations selected during the 2010-2011 Nitrates Monitoring Campaign, covering the period from 01/10/2013 to 30/09/2014, for surface waters.
__Partner organisations__
International Office of Water, Water Agencies, Water Offices, ARS, DEAL, DREAL
[See this page on geo.data.gouv.fr](https://geo.data.gouv.fr/fr/datasets/ab0bcee8caeff72398a741f944eacd6770ef5c95)
Build on reliable and scalable technology
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
Some basic informations about API Store ®.
Operation and development of APIs are currently fully funded by company Apitalks and its usage is for free.
Yes, you can.
All important information such as time of last update, license and other information are in response of each API call.
In case of major update that would not be compatible with previous version of API, we keep for 30 days both versions so you will have enough time to transfer to new version. We will inform you about the changes in advance by e-mail.