Dry summers and heavy rainfall, population pressure in urban, rural and natural areas, the introduction of non-native organisms and the resulting threat to native biodiversity, glacier melting and permafrost thawing: The world is changing. WSL is also responding to these changes with a new strategy.
«Over the next decade, WSL is committed to making a decisive contribution to finding solutions to the most pressing environmental and societal problems of our era,» says Christoph Hegg, Acting Director of WSL. «To achieve this goal, we have crafted the WSL Strategy 2035 through an inclusive and participatory process.»
The WSL Strategy 2035 aims to effectively meet the challenges of global change and is based on the institute’s many years of experience and outstanding achievements.
The strategy focuses on four overarching development foci: global change impacts, sustainable urbanization, environmental governance and multifunctional landscapes.
The development foci build on the WSL’s existing core thematic areas: forest, biodiversity, landscape, natural hazards, and snow and ice. «WSL boast significant expertise in these domains, with our scientists spearheading research for decades,» says Christoph Hegg. «Nevertheless, there are still many unresolved issues - and global change means that new questions are constantly being added.»
In all’areas, WSL will continue to rely on state-of-the-art research and monitoring methods, and these are undergoing profound change due to rapid digitalization and technological innovations.
Furthermore, the Institute also considers partnership-based cooperation to be important, particularly in the development foci:
«The development foci address challenges that affect not only WSL, but environmental research as a whole,» emphasizes Christoph Hegg, «and they must be tackled holistically by the natural and social sciences together.» Key to this approach is cooperation with other research institutes, such as Eawag.
The WSL Strategy 2035 was developed in a nine-month process. Christoph Hegg affirms, «As a federal research institute and part of the ETH Domain, we are committed to excellence in research and implementation with Strategy 2035. WSL stands prepared to confront the challenges of a changing world».
The world in global change
Global change - climate change, land-use change, and other anthropogenic impacts - is the cause of most of today’s pressing environmental and societal challenges. Switzerland and Europe in general are being exposed to increasingly frequent climatic extremes, including warmer, seasonally drier conditions, but also heavy precipitation events. This region is also experiencing increasing population pressure in urban, rural, and natural areas. Intensive agriculture, urbanization, climate change, and introduced non-native organisms threaten native biodiversity. Furthermore, ice loss and permafrost thaw expose mountain regions to increasing risks.