Water Quality Monitoring Data | DataSupplier
DataSupplier
Insights EN · ES Log in Request a Quote
Insights / Data domains

Water quality monitoring data

DataSupplier·12 min read

Water quality affects health, ecosystems and compliance, and monitoring data makes it visible. This guide covers water quality data and how to source it.

Why water quality data matters

Pollution, health and regulation drive the need for water quality data across rivers, groundwater, bathing and drinking water. It supports compliance, environmental management and risk.

The data landscape

  • Surface water: river and lake quality.
  • Groundwater: aquifer quality.
  • Bathing and drinking: regulated quality data.
  • Sensors: continuous monitoring.

Common use cases

Regulatory compliance and reporting, environmental and health risk, utility operations, and ESG.

Sourcing considerations

Official monitoring networks (under EU water directives) provide much data, with sensors adding continuity. Parameters and methods vary, so harmonisation and provenance matter. Combining with location and catchment data adds value.

Delivery and governance

Operations want near-real-time sensor data; compliance uses periodic data. Most is non-personal. Provenance matters for regulated reporting.

In a managed model

A managed partner can combine network and sensor water-quality data, harmonised and documented.

Networks plus sensors

Water quality data spans surface, groundwater, bathing and drinking water from official monitoring networks (under EU water directives), with sensors adding continuity. Parameters and methods vary, so harmonisation and provenance matter.

Cadence and context

Operations want near-real-time sensor data while compliance uses periodic data; combining with location and catchment data adds value.

Key takeaways
  • Water quality data supports compliance, health and environment.
  • Combine surface, groundwater, bathing/drinking and sensor data.
  • Parameters and methods vary; harmonise and document.
  • Use near-real-time sensors for operations and periodic data for compliance.

Sources & further reading

  • European Environment Agency: water quality data.
  • EUR-Lex: Water Framework, Bathing Water and Drinking Water Directives.
  • National monitoring networks.
  • Copernicus for water-related EO.
Need water quality data?

We combine network and sensor water-quality data, harmonised and documented. Get a no-obligation quote.

Request a Quote Book a 30-minute call
Related
Water & utilities data: smart metering, leakage and demand →Environment & climate data: emissions, flood, drought and EO →