49% of Thailand's Coastal Waters Clean; Industrial Zones Polluted

Tejal Somvanshi

Latest reports show Thailand's beaches tell two different stories - clean Andaman waters on one side and dirty industrial areas on the other.

Photo Source: John Voo (CC BY 2.0)

Half of Thailand's beach spots stay clean, with Samila and Nai Harn beaches showing the cleanest waters.

Photo Source: dronepicr (CC BY 2.0)

Tourists flock to Krabi's Maya beach and Ton Sai beach for their crystal-clear waters and unspoiled beauty.

Photo source: Cybercap (CC BY-SA 3.0)

Factory pollution has turned Samut Prakan's coastal waters dirty and unsafe for swimming.

Photo Source: Anton10 (CC BY 3.0)

Waste from textile factories and city drains makes the Chao Phraya River mouth heavily polluted.

Photo Source: Nik Cyclist (CC BY 2.0)

Beach lovers find safer swimming spots along Phuket and Krabi's Andaman coast compared to Gulf of Thailand.

Photo Source: GeoTravellers (CC BY-SA 3.0)

With 40 million visitors coming to Thailand in 2025, clean beach water becomes more important than ever.

Photo Source: Dronepicr (CC BY 2.0)

Stay safe by avoiding beaches near factories and river mouths where pollution levels run high.

Photo Source: Dronepicr (CC BY 2.0)

While Thai officials keep watching water quality, the fight to protect all beach areas continues.

Photo Source: Vyacheslav Argenberg (CC BY 4.0)

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