Water in the Seine River had unsafe elevated levels of E. coli less than two months before swimming competitions are scheduled to take place in it during the Paris Olympics, according to test results published Friday.
Contamination levels in the first eight days of June, after persistent heavy rain in Paris, showed bacteria such as E. coli and enterococci beyond limits judged safe for athletes.
The report was published by monitoring group Eau de Paris one day after a senior International Olympic Committee executive said there were “no reasons to doubt” races will go ahead as scheduled in in a historic downtown stretch of the Seine near the Eiffel Tower.
Setting aside the water quality of the Seine, why are they swimming in an unchlorinated body of water in the first place? Has that happened before?
kagis
Apparently this is part of a PR campaign for Paris or something, as they had this big push to reduce sewage in it to the point where it could be used for the Olympics. And it sounds like this is the first time that they’re doing it in a river:
https://www.nbcsports.com/olympics/news/paris-olympics-seine-river-swimming
I wonder if they have swimming pools designated for use as backups if this doesn’t work out?
kagis
Apparently yes (no for an alternate location, but if the water quality is unacceptable, they plan to just defer the swimming races until it becomes acceptable):
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/12/sports/olympics/paris-olympics-seine-cleanup.html
Certain events like marathon swimming and triathlon can’t be done in a pool.