40% of Swiss Wood Directly Burned, Raising Environmental Concerns
New Empa study reveals low 8% recycling rate for wood in Switzerland, sparking debate about sustainable resource management
New Empa study reveals low 8% recycling rate for wood in Switzerland, sparking debate about sustainable resource management

"This situation is not ideal, especially as wood is one of the most important raw materials on the road to a climate-neutral future."
"It should only go into the furnace when it can no longer be used as a material."
Switzerland is incinerating its own potential. A staggering 40% of the nation's wood harvest is fed directly into furnaces, bypassing any opportunity for reuse or recycling. This alarming statistic comes from a groundbreaking study by the Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology (Empa), published in the Journal of Industrial Ecology. Every year, Switzerland harvests between five and seven million cubic metres of wood, yet a massive portion of this precious raw material is immediately reduced to ash for energy.
The inefficiency is glaring when placed against other sectors. While Switzerland boasts a robust 70% recycling rate for paper, the recycling rate for wood plummets to a paltry 8%. This disparity exposes a critical gap in the nation's sustainability strategy. By burning wood immediately after harvest, Switzerland is effectively treating a versatile, long-lasting construction material as a single-use fuel source. As the country grapples with ambitious climate goals, this "burn-first" mentality represents a significant missed opportunity to maximize the lifecycle of natural resources.
Wood is not just a material; it is a carbon vault. As trees grow, they bind CO2 from the atmosphere, acting as a critical defense against climate change. However, when this wood is burned immediately, that stored carbon is released back into the atmosphere in an instant. Empa researchers argue that this current trajectory is "far from ideal" for a nation striving for a climate-neutral future.
To effectively combat global warming, wood must remain in the "technosphere"âthe human-made environmentâfor as long as possible. Every year a wooden beam holds up a roof is another year that carbon remains locked away. By prioritizing immediate energy generation over material use, Switzerland is inadvertently accelerating carbon release rather than banking it. The scientific consensus is clear: wood's primary role in the green transition must be as a long-term material alternative to fossil-fuel-intensive concrete and steel, not merely as a quick-fix fuel source. The forest's ability to act as a CO2 sink is severely compromised when the harvest is destined for the stove rather than the sawmill.
The solution demands a radical shift to "cascading use." Researchers from Empa and the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL) are calling for a strict hierarchy in how wood is utilized. In this model, a harvested tree must first serve its highest purpose: becoming high-quality beams, boards, and construction materials. These products should be maintained and reused for decades, extending the carbon storage lifespan of the timber.
Only when the wood can no longer structurally support a building or be repurposed into furniture should it be broken down into smaller components like wood chips or fiberboards. The furnace should be the absolute last resort, the final destination only when the material has been exhausted of all other utility. Currently, the Swiss system short-circuits this cycle, skipping the valuable intermediate stages. Adopting this cascading approach isn't just about efficiency; it is an economic and environmental necessity. By transforming wood from a disposable fuel into a durable asset, Switzerland can drastically reduce its reliance on energy-intensive imported materials while keeping domestic carbon locked in its buildings.
The stakes for Swiss forestry have never been higher. As climate change accelerates, bringing droughts that threaten the very health of Swiss forests, the management of harvested wood becomes a matter of national urgency. We cannot afford to be wasteful. The forest and the intelligent use of its resources play a pivotal role in achieving Switzerland's net-zero targets.
Transitioning away from the 40% burn rate requires a systemic overhaul involving policy changes, construction industry adaptation, and consumer awareness. If Switzerland is to lead in sustainable resource management, it must treat its timber as a strategic reserve, not firewood. The Empa study serves as a critical wake-up call: the path to a sustainable future is built with wood, not fueled by it. As we look toward 2050, the measure of our success will not just be how many trees we plant, but how wisely we use the ones we harvest. The era of direct burning must end to make way for the era of sustainable preservation.