Stretch of River Cam shortlisted to become official swimming spot
It's one of 27 bodies of water across the country designated by the Environment Department
A stretch of the River Cam at Sheep's Green has been shortlisted to become an official swimming spot.
Waterways across England will be designated as swimming spots as part of Government plans to establish dozens of new bathing water sites.
A total of 27 new bathing sites would be designated under the plans, many of which are in rivers and lakes, significantly boosting the number of such official inland swimming areas.
If designated, the sites would receive regular water monitoring by the Environment Agency, which would investigate pollution sources and identify steps to be taken in response, officials said.
People would be able to see whether it was safe to swim in the waters, which include popular "wild swimming" spots.
The Environment Department (Defra) said last year 96% of bathing waters in England met minimum annual standards and 90% were rated as "good" or "excellent".
But there has been growing public anger over the state of England's rivers and coastal waters, which suffer pollution from sewage outlets and other sources such as agricultural runoff.
The proposed new bathing sites include the River Severn at Ironbridge and at Shrewsbury in Shropshire, Wallingford Beach on the River Thames in Berkshire, the River Wharfe at Wetherby, West Yorkshire, and the Cam at Sheep's Green, Cambridge.
In addition, several spots on Coniston Water and one on Derwent Water, in Cumbria, would be added to the list under the plans.
The list of 27 proposed sites also includes several on the River Dart Estuary in Devon, and beaches in West Sussex, Dorset and Tyne and Wear.
There were 424 designated bathing waters in England in 2023, with only a handful of them inland, and the vast majority on the coast.
Making the announcement on what was described as the largest ever rollout of new bathing sites, water minister Robbie Moore said: "Many people enjoy spending time in our rivers, lakes and coastal beaches, and I am very aware of the value they bring in terms of social, health and wellbeing benefits."
"I want to continue to improve the quality of our bathing waters, which is why we are taking action across the board to drive up standards and hold water companies to account.
"I encourage all local communities and organisations with an interest to take part in this consultation and have their say."
Defra said the sites put forward for consultation, which runs until March 10, were chosen based on how many people bathe there and whether it has suitable facilities such as toilets.
But Liberal Democrat environment spokesperson Tim Farron said: "Conservative ministers have finally buckled to Liberal Democrat demands for more bathing water sites, but the grim truth is water firms have dumped over 400,000 hours of sewage into swimming spots since 2020."
Chairman of the parliamentary Environmental Audit Committee, Tory MP Philip Dunne, said the designation of inland waters would boost monitoring and encourage efforts to tackle poor water quality.
"This huge uptick in designation of sites in England which will be required to have bathing-quality waters shows a determination to deliver consistently high levels of water quality in areas the public demand it," he said.
"The ambition to deliver bathing-quality waters at these sites must be matched by an ambition to deliver improved water quality across England's waterways.
"This will benefit recreational water users and the precious ecosystems which depend on clean water."