Forecasting bathing water quality in the UK: A critical review

Author:

Krupska Karolina Urszula1ORCID,Speight Linda2ORCID,Robinson James Stephen1ORCID,Gilbert Adam James3ORCID,Cloke Hannah14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography and Environmental Science University of Reading Reading UK

2. School of Geography and the Environment University of Oxford Oxford UK

3. Environment Agency Bodmin UK

4. Department of Meteorology University of Reading Reading UK

Abstract

AbstractClimate change is altering rainfall patterns resulting in increasing variability and intensity of rainfall events worldwide. Increases to short duration, intense rainfall (i.e., convective rainfall), will lead to increases in sewage overflow and run‐off from agricultural land. Such events generate spikes in micro‐organisms from feces and manure, especially Escherichia coli and intestinal enterococci, that temporarily end up in bathing waters posing serious health risks to bathers. Forecasting of bathing water quality associated with convective rainfall presents a distinctive forecasting challenge due to high uncertainties associated with predicting the timing, location, and impact of such events. In this article, we review examples of bathing water quality forecasting practices, with a focus on the United Kingdom where convective rainfall in the summer bathing water season is a particular concern, and question whether the current approach is robust in a changing climate. We discuss potential upgrades in bathing water forecasting and identify the main challenges that must be addressed before an improved framework for bathing water forecasting can be achieved. Although developments in meteorological and hydrological short‐range forecasting capabilities are promising, convective rainfall forecasting has significant predictability limits. We suggest taking full advantage of short‐range forecasts to provide sub‐daily bathing water forecasts, focusing on targeted bathing water monitoring regimes to improve model accuracy with the ultimate goal of providing improved information and guidance for beach users.This article is categorized under: Science of Water > Water and Environmental Change Human Water > Water Governance Science of Water > Water Quality

Funder

University of Reading

Publisher

Wiley

Reference195 articles.

1. 2006/7/EC. (2006).Directive 2006/7/EC of the European Parliament and of the council of 15 February 2006 concerning the management of bathing water quality and repealing directive 76/160/EEC. Official Journal of the European Union L 064(1882) (pp. 37–51).

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3. A review of uncertainty quantification in deep learning: Techniques, applications and challenges

4. Agudelo Higuita N. I. &Huycke M. M.(2014).Enterococcal disease epidemiology and implications for treatment. Enterococci: From commensals to leading causes of drug resistant infection (pp. 1–35).http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24649504

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