Swiss voters approve global minimum corporate tax, climate goals
GENEVA: The Swiss, feeling the impact of global warming on their rapidly melting glaciers, on Sunday backed a new climate bill aimed at steering their country towards carbon neutrality by 2050. Near-final results showed almost 59 per cent of voters supporting the new law, which will require Switzerland to slash its dependence on imported oil and gas, scaling up the development and use of greener and more home-grown alternatives.
Voters also overwhelmingly backed adopting a global minimum tax rate of 15pc for multinational corporations in a second referendum, with nearly 79pc in favour, with full results in from all but one of Switzerland’s 26 cantons. Voter participation in the referendums stood at around 42pc.
Recent opinion polls had indicated strong but slipping support for the climate bill, amid an anxiety-infused campaign around electricity shortages and economic ruin driven by the populist right-wing Swiss People’s Party (SVP).
Supporters insisted the law was needed to ensure energy security and independence, and to help address the ravages of climate change, highlighted by the dramatic melting of glaciers in the Swiss Alps, which lost a third of their ice volume between 2001 and 2022.
Leading Swiss glaciologist Matthias Huss, who has been closely following the glaciers’ decline, hailed in a tweet the “strong signal” sent by Sunday’s vote, and said he was “very happy the arguments of climate science were heard”.
Socialist Party parliamentarian Valerie Piller Carrard celebrated the vote as “an important step for future generations”.
Energy has long been a tricky issue in Switzerland, which imports around three quarters of its energy, with all the oil and natural gas consumed coming from abroad.
Concerns around Switzerland’s reliance on external sources have been swelling since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine threw into doubt Swiss access to much of the foreign energy it uses.
Climate activists had initially wanted to push for a total ban on all oil and gas consumption in Switzerland by 2050. But the government baulked at the so-called Glacier Initiative, drawing up a counter-proposal that scrapped the idea of a ban but included other elements.
The text promises financial support of two billion Swiss francs ($2.2 billion) over a decade to promote the replacement of gas or oil heating systems with climate-friendly alternatives, as well as aid to push businesses towards green innovation.
Nearly all of Switzerland’s major parties supported the bill, except the SVP — the country’s largest party — which triggered the referendum against what it dismissed as the “electricity-wasting law”.
It warned the bill’s goal of achieving climate neutrality in just over a quarter-century would effectively mean a fossil fuel ban, which it claims would threaten energy access and send household electricity bills soaring.
The SVP voiced disappointment Sunday, with campaign chief Michael Graber insisting to 20 Minutes that “the bill for adopting this law will be presented much later”.