Accessibility

The website you are viewing has been built and designed to meet the WCAG 2.1 AA accessibility guidelines.

This means that specific technical tools and content design principles have been implemented to assist users with visual, hearing, physical, speech, cognitive, language, learning and neurological disabilities in accessing the content of the website, 

Additionally, users can enhance information accessibility by adjusting settings at the browser and operating system level. Below is an overview of the main tools.

Keyboard navigation

This website is navigable only with the keyboard. Navigation is carried out using the Tab key. With each press, the focus moves to the next element. The currently active element is highlighted with a box around it. To activate a link that is in focus, press the Enter key.

Magnification


Browsers

To magnify content, we recommend starting with the built-in functionality of your browser.

In most popular browsers, you can zoom in and out by holding the Ctrl key (or Cmd key on macOS) and pressing the + or – key at the same time. Another convenient option is to use the mouse: hold down the Ctrl key while scrolling the mouse wheel. To reset the zoom to its default size, press Ctrl and 0 simultaneously.

Separate programs

All major operating systems provide settings to magnify the content on your screen.

Windows 10 and Windows 11: First, open the Start menu, type ‘Magnifier’ and press Enter. The Magnifier tool opens, which magnifies the selected area and follows the mouse cursor by default.

On macOS, you can access the magnification feature as follows: Apple Menu > System Preferences > Accessibility (or Universal Access) > Zoom.

Browser extensions

Extensions are available for browsers to magnify screen content and extend the existing functionality of the browser. For example, for Chrome, there is the Zoom Page extension, which is available in the Chrome Web Store.

This extension allows you to zoom in on the whole page or just the text, as needed.

Using a screen reader

A screen reader is a program designed to interpret the content displayed on a computer screen and convey it in alternative forms, such as sounds or audio commentary. In particular, it is an aid for the visually impaired. 

The content on this website is created following standards that screen readers can easily understand and in such a way that each type of visual content can be reproduced in a different format. For instance, images are accompanied by descriptive text and the layout and element order are structured to accommodate screen reader navigation, allowing information to be consumed in a logical sequence.

A selection of screen readers:

JAWS (Windows) opens in a new tab;
VoiceOver (macOS, free, built-in)