CERN is pushing for its next-generation particle accelerator, the Future Circular Collider (FCC), which comes with a CHF 15 billion price tag for its first phase. While the scientific community is united behind the project, which aims to unlock the universe's secrets, securing funding from member states in a fracturing world presents the lab's biggest challenge yet.

"There is an absolute, clear consensus within the particle physics community that FCC is the right way to go."
"Itâs a little bit embarrassing to say that you have a model of all the particles in the universe but you donât know what the remaining 80â85% of the universe is made of."
CHF 15 billion is the staggering price of human curiosity. CERN, the crown jewel of Genevaâs scientific landscape, has officially unveiled its roadmap for the Future Circular Collider (FCC), a gargantuan 90.7-kilometer ring that dwarfs the current Large Hadron Collider. This is not merely an upgrade; it is a total reimagining of how we interrogate the fabric of existence. The project aims to create a 'Higgs factory' capable of mass-producing the elusive particles that give the universe its mass. While the scientific community stands in absolute, unwavering consensus, the financial reality is a different beast entirely. CERN currently faces a daunting CHF 4 billion shortfall that it must bridge through private donors and non-member states. Director-General Mark Thomson is charging forward with confidence, betting that the world still values the 'why' of our existence enough to foot the bill. If successful, this machine will become the most extraordinary instrument ever built by human hands, cementing Switzerland's status as the global epicenter of high-energy physics for the next century.
A staggering 30% cut to particle physics programs is being weighed by the United Kingdom, signaling a chilling shift in the international cooperation that once defined CERN. The era of the 1990s, which birthed the LHC in a spirit of post-Cold War unity, has evaporated. Today, CERN grapples with a world divided by nationalist interests and tightening budgets. Germany, the lab's largest financial contributor, is already pushing back against proposed funding mechanisms, while the United States prioritizes AI and quantum technology over traditional particle research. Even more dramatic is the complete ousting of Russia following the invasion of Ukraineâa move that severed ties with a partner that remained steadfast even during the height of the Cold War. However, a strategic window has opened: China has quietly shelved its own rival 100km collider until 2030. This pause gives Geneva a critical, albeit brief, competitive advantage. The race to unlock the universe is no longer just about physics; it is a high-stakes diplomatic chess match where the board is constantly shifting.
85% of our universe is missing, and the current tools of science are powerless to find it. This 'embarrassing' gap in human knowledge, as University of Zurich physicist Ben Kilminster describes it, is the primary target of the FCC. The current Large Hadron Collider has reached its ceiling; it discovered the Higgs boson in 2012, but it cannot explain why matter dominates antimatter or what constitutes the dark matter that holds galaxies together. The FCCâs first phase will utilize electron-positron collisions to achieve unprecedented precision, followed by a second phase in the 2070s that will smash protons with ten times the energy of the LHC. We are hunting for 'new physics'âparticles so heavy and forces so subtle they have remained invisible to every experiment in history. This is a quest to understand why we exist at all. Without these answers, our model of the cosmos remains a mere fragment. The FCC represents the only viable path forward to solve the mysteries that the Higgs boson left behind, pushing the boundaries of the known world into the realm of the extraordinary.
200 meters beneath the serene Swiss countryside, a battle is brewing that has nothing to do with subatomic particles. While the scientific elite eyes the stars, local associations like NoĂŠ21 are looking at the soil. The FCCâs construction would require a massive 91-kilometer tunnel threading beneath Lake Geneva and the RhĂ´ne River, sparking intense environmental concerns among the residents of the Franco-Swiss border. This local friction creates a dramatic contrast: the pursuit of universal truths versus the protection of local landscapes. For Switzerland, the FCC is a double-edged sword. It promises to attract the next generation of global talent and billions in investment, yet it challenges the environmental sensibilities of a nation that prides itself on its natural beauty. As the CERN Council prepares for its pivotal session in Budapest this May, the pressure is mounting. The lab must not only convince world leaders to open their wallets but also reassure its own neighbors that the quest to unlock the universe won't cost them their backyard. The future of Geneva as the worldâs science capital hangs in the balance.