A new report reveals how influential industry groups in Europe, including those in agriculture, energy, mining, and chemicals, are attempting to weaken the EU’s Water Framework Directive (WFD), which safeguards rivers, lakes, and groundwater from pollution. These sectors are pressuring the European Commission to use the upcoming Environmental “Omnibus” Package to roll back key protections under the guise of “simplification” and “competitiveness,” despite the WFD being declared “fit for purpose” in 2019. Proposed changes include scrapping the “one-out, all-out” principle, weakening bans on destroying nature, and postponing the 2027 restoration deadline.
If implemented, these rollbacks could increase pollution, destroy ecosystems, and endanger drinking water supplies, while undermining the EU’s Water Resilience Strategy and climate objectives. The report highlights how industrial agriculture seeks to evade essential pollution controls, extractive industries push for easier permits for new mines, and energy companies aim to redefine pollution standards—all motivated by short-term profits rather than environmental or public health considerations.
By contrast, many progressive businesses support stronger enforcement of the WFD, recognizing that healthy freshwater ecosystems are crucial for long-term stability, productivity, and resilience in Europe. Environmental groups, including Living Rivers Europe, warn that siding with industry lobbyists would harm citizens, ecosystems, and even businesses themselves in the long term, as short-term deregulation fuels public backlash and environmental crises.
The report emphasizes that only a small fraction of industry actors are advocating for WFD rollbacks, while the majority recognize the importance of maintaining strong water protections. It is based on publicly available submissions to the European Commission’s call for evidence on the “Simplification of administrative burdens in environmental legislation” conducted between 22 July and 10 September 2025.
The report urges the European Commission to exclude the Water Framework Directive from the Omnibus Package, enforce existing rules, fund and strengthen implementation through the Water Resilience Strategy, and protect citizens’ right to clean, safe, and affordable water.







