PARIS : The River Seine is already suitable for bathing two days out of three on average in the summer, but Paris is hoping to further improve the water quality as next year's Olympics loom.The primary goal is to make the Seine batheable by 2025, and the Games served as a huge boost, even though some sporting events were cancelled last summer because the health standards were not met following rare heavy rains and a sewer problem."The amounts of rain we had had not been (seen) since the 1970s," Pauline Lavaud, the Paris mayor's advisor on energy and climate transition, water and maintenance of public spaces, told reporters.The city has been building a storage basin capable of holding 46,000 cubic metres of waste water to significantly reduce the risks of pollution of the Seine.The water will be tested every day during the Olympics to make sure it will be safe for athletes and triathletes to swim in the Seine.Once the rain water is collected in the Austerlitz basin - a monster, 30-metre deep structure the size of a dozen Olympic swimming pools - it will be evacuated through a tunnel beneath the train station to a treatment plant.When the water meets the required health criteria, it will then be poured into the Seine."We are now back to the level of sanity of the pre-industrial era," Lavaud said."The Olympics have made us gain 10 years on our project of making the Seine bathable."Benjamin Raigneau, the city's Cleanliness and Water director, said that after only two types of fish could be found in the river in the 1980s, there were now more than 30, including crayfish.Will it be enough, however, for the open water and triathlon events to take place?"We're trying to reduce all risks, and if it is not possible to swim one