Travel
Tourists evacuated from Eiffel Tower after reports of elevator fire
The Parisian landmark attracts up to 25,000 visitors a day on average.
Some 1,200 tourists were evacuated on Tuesday from the iconic Paris landmark, the Eiffel Tower, after reports of a fire in one of its elevator shafts between the first and second floor.
The fire, which was caused by one of the elevator cables overheating at around 10:30 am, has since been contained, according to Euronews’ sources. Access to the tower has been restricted during the operation.
The tourist attraction and one of the world’s most famous towers is visited by an average of 15,000 to 25,000 visitors daily.
The Eiffel Tower has experienced one major fire in the past. The January 1956 blaze in its TV control room caused significant damage to its top section. The repairs took a year, and then the current radio antenna was added to its pinnacle.
The French capital remains scarred by the devastating blaze that almost destroyed another prominent landmark, the Notre Dame Cathedral, in 2019.
The Gothic architectural masterpiece was closed for five years and was just reopened to the public earlier this month.
Travel
FAA lifts ‘national groundstop’ of American Airlines flights after technical issue
American Airlines flight services have resumed across the United States after they were temporarily grounded due to a technical issue impacting the airline’s entire system.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has announced that a ‘nationwide groundstop’ of all American Airlines flights has been lifted.
Earlier, the FAA reported a technical issue affecting the carrier’s entire system.
The problem has been resolved and the system is running again.
Delays are still expected after the hour-long outage with flight tracker Flightradar24 posting on X that “it will take some time for flights to get back to normal”.
Services are expected to be departing on time by the afternoon.
American Airlines flights to Europe temporarily grounded
The temporary disruption came as millions of people are travelling for the holiday season, including back home to Europe.
American Airlines flies to 15 countries in Europe with destinations including the UK, France, Germany and Italy.
In social media replies to frustrated travellers, the airline said: “Our team is currently working to rectify this. Your continued patience is appreciated.”
The company has now released a statement saying, “A vendor technology issue briefly affected flights this morning”.
“That issue has been resolved and flights have resumed. We sincerely apologize to our customers for the inconvenience this morning,” it continues.
“It’s all hands on deck as our team is working diligently to get customers where they need to go as quickly as possible.”
The FAA’s website confirmed that American Airlines requested a ‘nationwide groundstop’ for its flights, including those operated by its subsidiary airlines.
The timing of the grounding comes at a critical period, as the holiday season is one of the busiest travel periods.
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) estimates it will screen 40 million passengers during the holidays, which run until 2 January.
Travel
Europeans prioritise work-life balance whilst Asia focuses on career – study
A recent study highlights different attitudes towards work for EU countries and the Global South. The study chairperson is urging European leaders to start tackling serious issues sooner rather than later.
The Global South, a term which loosely refers to developing economies, is more satisfied with work life balance than countries in the EU, according to a recent study.
The study, carried out by Amrop, a leading global leadership and executive search consultancy, conducted The Meaning of Work study with 8,000 participants across Germany, France, Poland, the UK, the USA, China, India and Brazil.
The study saw German, French and Polish participants report satisfaction below 50%, whilst India reported a 73.3% satisfaction and the USA 59.9%, despite lower social and labour regulatory standards.
Global Chair of Amrop, Annika Farin, told Euronews that what surprised her the most from the study is Europe’s “non-willingness to step up and have the wish to go into a responsible role, be it in business or be it in politics.” She said she sees it as a wake-up call for European leaders.
“We should take that seriously and do something about it jointly,” Farin adds.
With the development of AI and shifting demographics, such as the Baby Boomer generation retiring and Gen Z entering the work force, societies are going to have to embrace changes all around.
“I think we cannot underestimate what’s coming. If we look at the demographics, we see what’s coming. We’ll have to have more people that we bring into our countries,” Farin says, urging more innovation regarding migration.
“What I liked in the study and was surprised to see, in a positive sense, was that it seems that a country like Germany remains attractive for other geographies and nearby countries,” she says.
According to the study, the USA (33%) is the top global choice when it comes to attractive working conditions, thanks to its strong job market, high salaries and diverse industries. Germany follows with 22%, ahead of Canada and the UK, each with 21% of global worker preferences.
“We should see that as an opportunity. Because that can also go away,” Farin says.
The study also shows that countries and age groups are united in their motivation to work for a good salary and in interesting jobs. Pensions are regarded as a hot topic amongst European countries, and have sparked major protests across France and fuelled political debate in Germany.
“One of the topics we really have to talk about, and I know that’s not always popular, is that people might have to work longer in some countries, in certain countries at least, particularly in European markets.” Farin suggests creating initiatives, such as lower taxation for pensioners that work for longer, and using entrepreneurial role models in the media and society to bridge the gap between older and younger people.
The study also shows that countries in the Global South show a stronger interest in leadership roles.
76% of Indian respondents and 66% of Brazilians aim for leadership or entrepreneurial roles. Comparatively, only 36% in Germany and 37% in France share this ambition.
Travel
Little reason for cheer as drought forces Spain to ration Cava wine production
Sales of cava, the Spanish sparkling wine, are down globally thanks to bad weather affecting vineyards but industry leaders have a plan to reverse their flagging fortunes.
Christmas may be round the corner, but cava makers have little to toast after a severe drought over the past three years wrought havoc on harvests.
Supplies of the bubbly wine which is made almost exclusively in Spain’s Catalonia region have run short, forcing bodegas to ration sales to their biggest markets abroad.
About 70% of the cava produced is sold abroad while the rest remains in the Spanish market.
Global sales of cava have fallen between January and September this year by 12.8% compared to the same period last year, according to an industry body. International sales dropped nearly 16%.
Traditionally, Germany was the largest market for lovers of Spanish bubbles but the self-imposed rationing of supplies by cava producers led to a drop of 55% in sales this year.
Part of the reason for this nose-dive in sales to Germany was Freixenet, the biggest cava producer in the world, which greatly reduced its supplies because it simply did not have the stock to sell.
In Britain, where cava has been a popular drink for many years, sales dropped 15.44% this year, compared with in 2023. Italian Prosecco has become the fizzy drink of choice for many.
This meant that Belgium became the leader in international sales, followed by the United States, where Spanish bodegas sold 12 million bottles this year. Russia, where the bubbly is popular, fell in the rankings of foreign markets, with a decrease of 20% in sales.
Amid this uncertainty in the cava world, the only countries where demand increased were Sweden, Japan and the Netherlands.
“It is clear that there is a scarcity of product available on the market at a moment when a quality fizzy wine like cava is well considered throughout the world,” Javier Pagés, the president of the Denomination of Origin of Cava Producers, which represents most bodegas, told journalists at a meeting earlier this month.
However, for producers of cava – but perhaps not for drinkers – the scarcity of the drink has delivered some pluses.
Prices rose on average by 20% internationally and 10% in Spain, according to the cava producer’s organisation.
“Fortunately, the scarcity of the product does have positive sides. As demand is higher than the available product, prices and margins trended upward, allowing value to be added throughout the chain (of production),” Pagés added.
“At the same time, the prices paid for grapes in the final harvest were once again significantly higher but on the other, the vast majority of winegrowers once again had very low yields due to the drought.”
Prayers for rain to avoid another drought
Cava growers are cautiously optimistic that 2025 may be wetter than the three previous years, when the drought was so severe than many villages in Catalonia resorted to praying for a few drops to fall.
The major companies called for Spanish authorities to help provide irrigation schemes and other projects to help counter future droughts.
Catalonia’s regional government recently announced plans to spend €2.3 billion by 2040 to try to solve its chronic water shortage problems.
Among the plans, is a new seawater desalinisation plant on the Costa Brava, at a cost of €200 million but it will also require financial help from the Spanish government.
Cava makers may have been hampered by a long-running drought, but they have also had to face increasing competition from their fiercest rivals, Champagne and Prosecco.
Sparkling wines have boomed in popularity in recent years, according to the International Organisation of Vine and Wine (OIV), an industry group, while wine’s popularity is generally on the decline as drinkers have turned to beer and spirits.
Red wine sales have declined while white wine, driven by the popularity of Prosecco, have increased.
“White wine demand and supply at the global level have expanded since 2000. At the beginning of the century, white wine accounted on average for 46% of the world total, while in more recent years this share rose to 49%,” an OIV report for 2023 said.
“One of the main driving forces behind this increase is the boom of sparkling wine. The main countries which contributed to the growth at the world level are Italy (driven by the global success of Prosecco), the USA, South Africa and Australia.”
In the cut-throat world of wine, some cava producers are dismissive of their Italian rival, Prosecco.
“Prosecco is just water and bubbles. Cava is a drink which takes years to produce, like champagne. It takes years to produce it. Prosecco is produced in months,” one cava maker who did not want to be named, told Euronews Culture.
The cava industry provides work for 6,200 people and it is produced by 349 bodegas, which sell cava in 100 countries.
Cava is not just a preserve of Catalonia; there are bodegas in other parts of Spain. But the drink is closely associated with the north-eastern region.
When Catalan separatists staged a failed independence bid in 2017, producers suffered from a hugely damaging boycott from other parts of the country.
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