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Vote projections indicate Swiss approve climate Bill as nation’s glaciers melt

Vote projections indicate Swiss approve climate Bill as nation’s glaciers melt

Some 58% of voters supported the Bill, according to projections by the GFS Bern Institute based on early vote counting and released by public broadcaster SRF.

Exact results were expected later in the day.

Switzerland Rhone Glacier
Chunks of ice float in a lake in front of Rhone Glacier near Goms in Switzerland (Matthias Schrader/AP)

The referendum was sparked by a campaign by scientists and environmentalists to save Switzerland’s glaciers, which are said to be melting away at an alarming rate.

Campaigners initially proposed even more ambitious measures but later backed a government plan that requires Switzerland to achieve “net-zero” emissions by 2050.

It also sets aside more than three billion Swiss francs (£2.6 billion) to help wean companies and homeowners off fossil fuels.

A glaciologist walks to the Rhone Glacier near Goms
A glaciologist walks to the Rhone Glacier near Goms (Matthias Schrader/AP)

The nationalist Swiss People’s Party, which demanded the popular vote, had claimed that the proposed measures would cause electricity prices to rise.

Backers of the plan argued that Switzerland would be hard-hit by global warming and was already seeing the effects of rising temperatures on its famous glaciers.

“The supporters have reason to rejoice,” Urs Bieri of the GFS Bern Institute told SRF.

“But by no means everyone is in favour of the law. The argument with the costs has brought many ‘no’ votes.”

Greenpeace Switzerland welcomed the first results of the referendum.

“This victory means that at last the goal of achieving net-zero emissions will be anchored in law. That gives better security for planning ahead and allows our country to take the path towards an exit from fossil fuels,” Georg Klingler, an expert on climate and energy at Greenpeace Switzerland, said.

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“The result of the vote shows that the citizens of our country are committed to the aim of limiting global warming to 1.5C in order to preserve as much as possible our glaciers, our water reserves, our agriculture and our prosperity.

Switzerland Rhone Glacier
Glaciologist Matthias Huss checks the thickness of the Rhone Glacier (Matthias Schrader/AP)

“I am very relieved to see that the lies disseminated by the opposite camp during the campaign did not sow the seed of doubt in people.”

Swiss glaciers experienced record melting last year, losing more than 6% of their volume and alarming scientists who say a loss of 2% would once have been considered extreme.

Experts such as Matthias Huss, a glaciologist at the Swiss Institute for Technology in Zurich, have taken to posting dramatic snapshots of retreating glaciers and rockslides from melting permafrost on social media to highlight the changes taking place in the Alps.

“Let’s act as long as we can still prevent the worst,” he recently wrote on Twitter.

  • June 18, 2023