The study was conducted in France using nitrate concentration and discharge records from 268 monitoring stations distributed across river basins covering about half of metropolitan France. Excessive nitrate concentrations remain a major environmental problem in European waters, largely due to agricultural pressures. Evaluating the effectiveness of mitigation policies such as the EU Nitrates Directive is difficult because hydrological variability strongly affects observed water-quality trends. This study estimated long-term trends in nitrate concentrations and loads and apportioned them between management and hydrological effects using flow-normalization techniques applied to monitored time series. Nitrate concentrations and loads declined over the last 30 years. Nitrate load decreased by 38 × 10⁶ kg N. Flow-normalization analysis revealed both synergistic and antagonistic interactions between management and hydrological effects, with mitigation measures identified as the main driver of improvement. Decreases were significantly greater in Nitrate Vulnerable Zones, where agricultural measures are mandatory under the Action Programmes of the Nitrates Directive. Cross-correlation analysis showed that the average watershed response time to management changes was about 5 years. These results indicate that the Nitrates Directive has contributed substantially to reducing nitrate pollution, but also that hydrological normalization is essential for policy evaluation because the lag in water-quality response exceeds the Directive’s 4-year reporting cycle and may hinder short-term assessment of mitigation benefits. • Nitrate loads decreased by 38 × 10⁶ kg N across catchments covering about half of metropolitan France. • Nitrate Vulnerable Zones showed the largest decreases in nitrate concentrations due to targeted management. • Management measures outweighed hydrological effects. • Lag between management actions and water-quality response limits policy assessment.
Bouraoui et al. (Tue,) studied this question.