In a pioneering conservation effort, scientists have successfully stored the first ice cores from melting Swiss glaciers in a new, permanent ice archive in Antarctica. The initiative comes as a new report from the Swiss Academy of Natural Sciences confirms that while the rate of biodiversity loss has slowed, it remains a worrying issue for the country.

"However, the level remains low."
"The only way to improve the state of biodiversity is to apply existing laws more rigorously."
In a race against time and rising temperatures, scientists have successfully deposited the first crucial samples of Swiss heritage into a natural freezer at the bottom of the world. The Ice Memory Foundation has officially opened a pioneering archive in Antarctica, a 35-meter ice cave carved nine meters beneath the surface where the temperature holds steady at a bone-chilling -52°C. This facility now houses invaluable ice cores from the Grand Combin glacier in Switzerland and Mont Blanc in France, safeguarding them for future generations as the Alps continue to melt.
The journey to this frozen sanctuary was nothing short of an odyssey. These cylindrical time capsules traveled for over 50 days by ship and plane to reach the continentâs perpetual frost. This is not merely storage; it is an act of defiance against climate change. By locking these samples away in the Antarctic ice, researchers from the Paul Scherrer Institute and the University of Bern ensure that the atmospheric data trapped withinâclues to our planet's climatic pastâsurvives even if the source glaciers vanish. It is a bold, desperate measure to preserve scientific truth in an era of environmental uncertainty.
While Swiss science secures victories in Antarctica, the environmental battle within Switzerlandâs borders remains precarious. A sobering new report from the Swiss Academy of Natural Sciences (Scnat) confirms a stark reality: more than a third of all species in the country are currently threatened. Although the rapid acceleration of biodiversity loss seen in the last century has slowed since the millennium began, the situation remains critically "low and unsatisfactory."
The data paints a worrying picture of a landscape under siege. Aquatic environments, sprawling built-up areas, and agricultural zonesâstretching from the flat plains to the lower mountain regionsâare identified as the primary casualties. This is not a distant problem; it is happening in our backyards, our lakes, and our fields. The stabilization of the decline offers a glimmer of hope, but Scnat explicitly warns that the current level of biodiversity is insufficient to sustain a healthy ecosystem. We are essentially treading water while the tide continues to rise against our native flora and fauna.
The culprits driving this ecological squeeze are neither mysterious nor new. Scnatâs report unequivocally points the finger at sustained, high-intensity human pressure. Intensive land use, relentless pollution, and the introduction of invasive alien species are battering Switzerland's delicate ecosystems. Compounding these threats is the overarching shadow of climate change, which acts as a force multiplier for every other stressor.
The connectivity between these issues is undeniable. The same warming trends that necessitate shipping glacier ice to Antarctica are dismantling habitats in the Swiss lowlands. As urbanization encroaches on natural spaces and agricultural demands intensify, the room for nature to breathe shrinks. The report highlights that the pressure is unrelenting, particularly in aquatic systems where pollution and physical alterations have left biodiversity in a desperate state. We are witnessing a systematic dismantling of the natural world, driven by our own consumption and expansion.
The path forward demands more than just scientific observation; it requires the iron will of enforcement. The Swiss Academy of Natural Sciences asserts that the only viable route to improving biodiversity is to apply existing laws more rigorously. We do not necessarily need new legislation; we need to honor the protections already on the books. The gap between policy and reality must be closed immediately if we are to save the remaining two-thirds of our species.
Switzerland stands at a crossroads. On one hand, we are capable of the logistical marvel of the Ice Memory Foundation, preserving the past in the Antarctic ice. On the other, we grapple with the day-to-day failure to protect the living present. The slowing rate of decline proves that conservation efforts can work, but "slowing" is not stopping, and it certainly isn't reversing. The mandate is clear: we must pivot from passive monitoring to active, aggressive protection of our natural heritage before the only place to find Swiss nature is in a frozen archive.