Europe has ranked every bathing place, beach and swimming area across the EU. How do the UK's beaches and lakes compare? Find which are great - and which are banned? Get the data? Get the mapDo you like swimming outside? But how clean is your beach?Since 1990, the European Union has been monitoring over 21,000 beaches, lakes and rivers across Europe - anywhere where swimmers go al fresco, in fact. So that huge dataset covers Brighton Beach, the Hamsptead swimming ponds and the classic Mediterranean beaches of the South of France, Spain and Greece.So, what does the data, out today from the European Environment Agency, show for the UK? The overall figures are good - 96.8% of our swimming areas meet the legal standards, if not the full guidelines. This is down slightly on last year - but more swimming areas are now being surveyed.But three beaches had to be closed because standards were not high enough, including Blackpool North, Newhaven in Sussex and Tywyn in Wales.The rankings only include outside swimming places - not man-made lidos or pools.This is how the data looks on a Google Fusion map:Most British bathing areas do comply - but a significant number only meet the mandatory rules, not the wider-ranging guidelines.What is happening across Europe? According to the report:In 2010, 92.1% of Europe's coastal bathing waters and 90.2% of inland bathing waters met the minimum quality standards. Only 1.2% of coastal bathing water and 2.8% of inland sites were non-compliant. The remainder are unclassified due to insufficient data.In general, coastal bathing water quality deteriorated between 2009 and 2010 ? the number of bathing water bodies meeting the mandatory values fell by 3.5%, while those meeting guide values fell by 9.5%.Inland water quality has also dropped. The number of rivers and lakes achieving the guide values fell by 10.2%, although compliance with the mandatory values was almost stationary. Rivers were particularly problematic, with only 25% of river bathing waters achieving guide values.If you want to, you can find out what variables from the Directive they use to rank each beach here. The EEA use six, slightly confusing, categories. In plain language they mean:?�CG - The best beaches, complying with the law and the guidelines? CI - complies with the mandatory requirements - but not the guidelines?�B - banned or closed (temporarily or throughout the season)? NF - insufficiently sampled? NC - Does not comply with the legal requirements? NS - not sampledEventually we will try to map all of Europe's 21,000 beaches - and you can download every country's data here. The full UK data is below. What can you do with it?Data summary Download the data? DATA: download the full spreadsheetMore open dataData journalism and data visualisations from the GuardianWorld government data? Search the world's government data with our gatewayDevelopment and aid data? Search the world's global development data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?? Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group? Contact us at data@guardian.co.uk? Get the A-Z of data? More at the Datastore directory? Follow us on Twitter? Like us on FacebookPollutionSwimming holidaysSwimmingBeach holidaysSimon Rogersguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
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