RIO DE JANEIRO — Olympic sports federations will be monitoring efforts to clean up the polluted waters around Rio de Janeiro to prevent health risks to athletes at the 2016 Games.
Just 2 1/2 years before the Olympics, an extensive Associated Press report — published earlier this week — showed nearly 70 percent of Rio's sewage is untreated and dumped into iconic beach areas like Copacabana and Ipanema and into picturesque Guanabara Bay.
Those waters will host several of Rio's events at the Olympics and Paralympics.
FINA, the world governing body of swimming, said Friday that its sports medicine committee would check water conditions just before the games.
"A test event will be conducted some months in advance, in the same waters and under the same conditions," FINA said in a statement to the AP.
"On this occasion, the Rio 2016 organizing committee must present a certificate of water quality in accordance to Brazilian Law."
FINA's marathon swimming event will be held off Copacabana. Those waters are also the venue for the swimming portion of the triathlon.
In bid documents, Rio organizers pledged to Olympic officials that the pollution would be cleaned up after decades of neglect and poor planning.
In data obtained by AP, the measurement of fecal coliform bacteria in Copacabana went up 16 times above the Brazilian government's satisfactory level as recently as three weeks ago.
The Rodrigo de Freitas, the venue for rowing and canoeing located in the heart of the city, experiences periodic fish die-offs that leave thousands floating in the briny lake.
Matt Smith, executive director of rowing's world governing body FISA, said Rio officials blame heavy rains and the city's sewer system for the dead fish.
Smith said the health risk to rowers was "low" but cautioned about possible problems.
"We are working on contingency scenarios but if, for any reason, we have a massive rainfall just before or during the 2016 Games, we risk cancellation to ensure healthy conditions for the rowers," he said in an email to AP.
Smith said the last four Olympic regattas had been held on artificial courses where water quality was easy to control. The last natural lake was 1996 in Atlanta, he said.
The most deeply rooted problem is Guanabara Bay, which will hold sailing events. The bay has become a polluted dump where few locals — expect the poor from Rio's neighboring slums — dare to swim.
"We're for sure concerned about it, and we're in discussion with the organizing committee about it," said Jerome Pels, chief executive officer of sailing's world governing body, the ISAF. "We know with reports we are getting from sailors who are training there — just from the visual view of the water — that already there are some concerns. ... It's on our radar."
Rio organizers have been pressed by the International Olympic Committee to speed up building venues. Cleaning the water could add to delays in preparing for the games, which will cost about $15 billion in public and private money.
"Rio 2016 can guarantee beyond any doubt that no athlete, official or member of the Olympic family will be put at risk," Rio organizers said in a statement to AP. "The health and welfare of the athletes is always our top priority."
Rio organizers added that water quality was the responsibility of the state government.
"We trust that the authorities will deliver the conditions to enable the athletes to compete to the very best of their ability in 2016," organizers added.
The 2008 Beijing Olympics were impacted by the city's choking air pollution, which gave the city a black eye as the government tried to use the games to portray China as a rising, prosperous world power.
Carlos Minc, secretary for the environment for the state of Rio de Janeiro, acknowledged the bay's contamination has been festering for years.
The Rio state's INEA environmental agency has classified nearly all the 13 bayside beaches it monitors as "terrible" for 12 years running due to high levels of fecal bacteria. Exposure to such bacteria can cause gastro-intestinal illnesses like cramps, diarrhea, dysentery and cholera.
"That the bay is rotten and the beaches are polluted, everyone has known this for 20 years," Minc said Thursday in an interview in O Globo newspaper. "This is nothing new. ... What is new is that now we have a different response than before."
Minc said the state government had closed 10 landfills around the bay, though illegal ones were still operating. He said some industrial pollution had been curbed , and programs were in the works to retrieve floating garbage and install river treatment units — so-called RTU's built over rivers that filter most of the trash and human waste before it pours into open water.
Environmentalists see the RTU's as stopgap measures.
Minc also mentioned that cooperation was needed from Rio's city government.
Many delays in preparing the Rio Olympics have been caused by conflicts between Brazil's three levels of government — local, state and national.
The local organizing committee has yet to announce an operating budget, stalled because of long negotiations about which level of government will pay, and how much.
Marco Aurelio Sa Ribeiro, president of the Brazilian Sailing Confederation, acknowledged the bay was dirty, but said the sailing was good.
"Clearly the Guanabara Bay is not the cleanest place in the world, but it is a great place for sailing," he said in an interview. "Every year at least one world championship is held here. ... The foreign sailors are extremely pleased. The wind is fantastic and the view is wonderful."
"With 10 million people living around here, of course there is waste and sewage," he added.