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Home Switzerland

The major climate change-related risks facing Switzerland

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
June 5, 2025
in Switzerland
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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The major climate change-related risks facing Switzerland
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After a massive glacier collapse in the canton of Valais at the end of May 2025, the Swiss government published a list of other dangers that are likely to impact Switzerland in coming decades.

Scientists say that rising temperatures likely played a role in the disaster, which wiped out the village of Blatten.

“Rising global temperatures are indeed leading to drastic changes in high mountain regions,” researchers at the Federal Polytechnic Institute (ETH) in Zurich pointed out. 

Given present and future hazards of the climate change, the Federal Office for the Environment (BAFU) is addressing this issue in its analysis of consequences that warming temperatures will have on the country .

In a report released on June 5th, BAFU identified 34 events that could seriously impact Switzerland from now until year 2060.

All of them result  from five inter-related challenges: the increase in both extreme and average heat; the increase in summer heat; greater potential for natural hazards; as well as the increasing modification of natural environments and species composition.

“The risks associated with climate change in Switzerland are diverse. Climate risks within national borders overlap with climate risks abroad, which impact the country,” BAFU wrote. “These risks will intensify further in the coming decades. All sectors and regions of Switzerland are affected.”

These 34 listed derive from the five hazards:

Deterioration of human health (heat-related)

Lower productivity (heat-related)

Damage to transport infrastructure (heat-related)

Damage to electricity supply (heat-related)

Deterioration of animal health (heat-related)

Deterioration of forest services (heat-related)

Loss of agricultural yield (heat-related)

Loss of agricultural yield (drought)

Deterioration of forest services (drought)

Water shortages in lakes

Navigation restrictions

Damage to water supply

Damage caused by forest fires

Deterioration of animal health (pests)

Property damage caused by flooding

Personal injury caused by flooding

Business interruptions caused by flooding

Property damage caused by runoff

Business interruptions caused by runoff

Property damage caused by earth movements

Personal damage caused by earth movements

Business interruptions caused by earth movements

Property damage caused by hail and storms

Personal damage caused by hail and storms

Business interruptions caused by hail and storms

Losses in the winter tourism sector

Landscape degradation

Degradation of aquatic ecosystems

Degradation of forest ecosystems

Degradation of alpine ecosystems

Degradation of cultivated landscape ecosystems

Degradation of human health (harmful organisms)

Degradation of forest services (harmful organisms)

Losses of agricultural yield (harmful organisms)

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Can anything be done to avert these disasters?

Up to a point.

By identifying the high-risk areas, BAFU’s analysis “helps set priorities and deploy resources in a targeted manner. It also shows that adaptation to climate change can reduce vulnerabilities and, to some extent, exposure, and thus climate risks.”

In concrete terms, “it remains essential to systematically reduce greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by 2050 to avoid the most severe and potentially uncontrollable consequences” like those outlined above.

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