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EU seeks to give millions better access to drinking water by Staff Writers Brussels (AFP) Feb 1, 2018 The European Union proposed Thursday giving millions of people in the 28-nation bloc better access to safe tap water and reduce water consumption via wasteful plastic bottles. The legislation proposed by the European Commission, the EU executive, aims to make safe drinking water a citizen right in line with social rights adopted at a summit in Gothenburg, Sweden in November. The commission was responding to a petition signed by 1.6 million people demanding better access to potable water, European Commission Vice President Frans Timmermans said. "Today we are therefore proposing to modernise our EU law, improving the quality of drinking water and increasing the access of citizens where it matters most," Timmermans added in a statement. He said around 23 million among Europe's more than 500 million people are not connected to a public water supply. The proposals call for member countries to improve access for all people, especially for the vulnerable or marginalised, by setting up systems in public buildings and other public spaces. They also call for providing information online and elsewhere about the quality and supply of drinking water in their living areas. Lower consumption of bottled water can also help EU households save more than 600 million euros ($750 million) per year, the commission said. There will also be reduced plastic waste if people have greater confidence in tap water and consume less bottled water, it added. The European Union unveiled plans last month for all plastic packaging in Europe to be recyclable by 2030 and phase out single-use plastic like coffee cups to fight pollution. Britain's Prince Charles and others held an EU-backed conference last year for drastic action to stop eight million tonnes of plastic waste polluting the world's oceans annually.
World Bank funds fight against Baghdad water woes Baghdad (AFP) Feb 1, 2018 The Iraqi capital's decrepit water network will be overhauled under a $210 million World Bank project aimed at tackling chronic supply shortages and outbreaks of disease. Five million people are expected to benefit from the work, which includes steps to stop leaking sewer pipes contaminating Baghdad's water supply, the Bank said in a statement Wednesday. A 135,000 cubic metre reservoir will help the city cope with climate-induced droughts. Sewerage pumping stations will be modernised to redu ... read more
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