As parliament moves to lift the ban on new nuclear power plants to secure long-term energy, a Green-led coalition has launched a referendum to counter the move. This sets the stage for a nationwide vote, while experts debate the viability of keeping existing plants running versus investing in renewables.

"The most sensible policy is to keep the existing plants running."
"New reactors would deepen the countryâs dependence on nuclear technology, cost billions of francs and slow the expansion of renewable energy."
Switzerlandâs energy policy has just been detonated. In a move that defies the 2017 public mandate to phase out atomic energy, the Federal Council and a determined parliamentary majority have officially backed lifting the ban on new nuclear power stations. This is not a mere policy tweak; it is a fundamental shift in the nation's sovereign strategy to secure long-term energy independence. Proponents argue that without new reactors, Switzerland faces a winter of discontent, tethered to the whims of European electricity imports and the volatility of global markets. The 'Stop the Blackout' initiative has successfully pushed the government to reconsider the nuclear option as a vital pillar of a net-zero future. However, this legislative pivot has immediately collided with a wall of resistance. A powerful coalition of Greens, Socialists, and environmental advocates is already mobilizing, claiming this move betrays the democratic will of the people. The battle lines are drawn, and the stakes could not be higher for the Swiss grid.
A staggering CHF 25 billionâthat is the minimum price tag for a single new nuclear facility, according to opponents of the government's plan. While the technology is proven, the economics are increasingly viewed as a high-stakes gamble. A landmark report by 19 energy specialists from ETH Zurich and the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) delivers a sobering verdict: Switzerland does not strictly need new reactors to complete its energy transition. The study suggests that a robust combination of hydropower, solar, and wind, bolstered by advanced storage, can secure the nation's supply. For new nuclear to even stand a financial chance, the state would need to provide unprecedented guarantees, assuming risks that private investors currently refuse to touch. Construction costs must plummet far below the disastrous overruns seen in Franceâs Flamanville and Finlandâs Olkiluoto projects. Without massive government subsidiesâsimilar to those enjoyed by renewablesânew nuclear remains a 'legitimate' but economically precarious path that could drain the federal coffers for decades.
Switzerland currently operates the worldâs oldest nuclear relic: Beznau 1, a reactor that has been humming since 1969. While the safety record of the Swiss fleet is exemplary, the clock is ticking. Professor Maurizio Barbato of SUPSI warns that the most sensible immediate policy is to keep these existing giants running as long as safety permits. But 'long-term' in the nuclear world is a marathon, not a sprint. Building a new plant in the European context takes an agonizing 10 to 15 years, factoring in the labyrinthine bureaucratic processes, site selection, and inevitable legal appeals. Meanwhile, the much-hyped 'Generation IV' reactorsâpromised to be safer and more efficientâare dismissed by experts as a distant dream. Axpo and leading scientists agree these next-gen technologies won't contribute a single kilowatt to the Swiss grid before 2050. This leaves the nation in a precarious gap: forced to choose between extending the life of 50-year-old reactors or betting everything on a renewable revolution that must scale at an unprecedented velocity.
The ultimate power in this debate does not reside in the halls of Parliament, but in the hands of the Swiss voter. The Green-led coalition has launched a fierce referendum campaign, with a deadline of October 8th to gather 50,000 signatures. They argue that returning to nuclear power is a dangerous regression that will cannibalize funding for solar and wind energy. The memory of Fukushima still looms large, and any nuclear incident abroad could instantly vaporize political support for the governmentâs plan. If the signatures are secured, a nationwide vote in February 2027 will determine the trajectory of Swiss energy for the next century. Will Switzerland embrace a high-tech nuclear renaissance to ensure winter stability, or will it double down on the decentralized renewable path chosen in 2017? As the campaign intensifies, one thing is certain: the world is watching to see if this Alpine nation will lead the nuclear comeback or shut the door on the atom forever. The countdown to February has begun.