-
'Netflix House' marks streaming giant's first theme park
-
UN warns of rough winter ahead for refugees
-
Brazil's 'action agenda' at COP30 takes shape
-
Trump threatens $1 billion action as BBC apologises for edit error
-
Sinner dominates injury-hit Auger-Aliassime in ATP Finals opener
-
Trump hails Syria's 'tough' ex-jihadist president after historic talks
-
Syria's ex-jihadist president meets Trump for historic talks
-
Top US court hears case of Rastafarian whose hair was cut in prison
-
US mediator Kushner and Netanyahu discuss phase two of Gaza truce
-
End to US government shutdown in sight as Democrats quarrel
-
Trump threatens air traffic controllers over shutdown absences
-
US to remove warnings from menopause hormone therapy
-
UK water firm says 'highly likely' behind plastic pellet pollution incident
-
Syria's ex-jihadist president holds historic Trump talks
-
End to record-long US government shutdown in sight
-
France's ex-leader Sarkozy says after jail release 'truth will prevail'
-
Atalanta sack coach Juric after poor start to season
-
Trump threatens $1 billion action as BBC apologises for speech edit
-
Gattuso wants 'maximum commitment' as Italy's World Cup bid on the line
-
Indian capital car blast kills at least eight
-
Deadly measles surge sees Canada lose eradicated status
-
Brazil's Lula urges 'defeat' of climate deniers as COP30 opens
-
Strangled by jihadist blockade, Malians flee their desert town
-
US Supreme Court declines to hear case challenging same-sex marriage
-
'Fired-up' Fritz sees off Musetti in ATP Finals
-
Injured Courtois set to miss Belgium World Cup qualifiers
-
Bulatov, pillar of Russian contemporary art scene, dies at 92
-
Fritz sees off Musetti in ATP Finals
-
US strikes on alleged drug boats kill six more people
-
Sarkozy released from jail 'nightmare' pending appeal trial
-
COP30 has a mascot: the fiery-haired guardian of Brazil's forest
-
The Sudanese who told the world what happened in El-Fasher
-
Three things we learned from the Sao Paulo Grand Prix
-
ASC acquire majority share in Atletico Madrid
-
Ferrari boss tells Hamilton, Leclerc to drive, not talk
-
Bank of England seeks to 'build trust' in stablecoins
-
China suspends 'special port fees' on US vessels for one year
-
French court frees ex-president Sarkozy from jail pending appeal
-
No link between paracetamol and autism, major review finds
-
Typhoon Fung-wong floods Philippine towns, leaves 5 dead in its wake
-
France's Sarkozy says prison a 'nightmare' as prosecutors seek his release
-
Guinness maker Diageo picks new CEO after US tariffs cloud
-
China suspends 'special port fees' on US vessels
-
US senators take major step toward ending record shutdown
-
Typhoon Fung-wong leaves flooded Philippine towns in its wake
-
From Club Med to Beverly Hills: Assinie, the Ivorian Riviera
-
The 'ordinary' Arnie? Glen Powell reboots 'The Running Man'
-
Typhoon exposes centuries-old shipwreck off Vietnam port
-
French court to decide if ex-president Sarkozy can leave jail
-
China lifts sanctions on US units of South Korea ship giant Hanwha
Plentiful water offers relief in Vienna
As Europe suffered its worst drought in centuries, residents in Austria's capital were feeling fortunate for their plentiful water supply that courses from streams in the green forests of the Alps.
A rarety in the EU, the two million inhabitants of Vienna get their tap water from dozens of springs -- the main one some 655 metres (2,150 feet) above sea level.
It's a serious subject in Vienna, where access to clean drinking water has since 2001 even been guaranteed in the constitution -- a world first, according to the city's website.
"Vienna is in the fortunate position that, as a city of millions, firstly, we have enough water and secondly, that it's water of the best quality," Juergen Czernohorszky, Vienna councillor in charge of the environment, told AFP.
The summer of 2022 was the hottest in Europe's recorded history, as climate change drives ever longer heat spells and the drought parching the continent was the worst in at least 500 years.
Yet at the main Klaeffer spring feeding Vienna, some 150 kilometres (90 miles) outside the capital, the underground source bears water that is less than six degrees Celsius (43 degrees Fahrenheit) in temperature.
Some 10,000 litres (2,600 gallons) per second flow out from the Klaeffer spring alone, feeding a river named Salza that coils down a steep uninhabited valley.
The water system was set up about a century and a half ago under the Austro-Hungarian Empire to provide the city with fresh water to overcome diseases such as cholera.
Today, the city's sanctuary still encompasses 70 sources in untouched mountains south-west of the capital with a system of 130 aqueducts.
Thirty-one reservoirs in and around the city store the water, drawing officials from as far away as China to marvel at them, municipal water company Wiener Wasser spokeswoman Astrid Rompolt told AFP.
Each Viennese consumes around 130 litres of running water per day for some 30 euro cents ($0.30) -- 15 cents cheaper than the same amount in Paris.
The growing city plans to renovate 30 kilometres of pipeline per year to prepare for increasingly hot summers expected as the impacts of climate change intensify.
M.A.Colin--AMWN