Following the devastating glacier collapse in Blatten, Foreign Minister Cassis urges increased investment in disaster prevention at Geneva conference.

"Given the brutality of the event, this is almost a miracle."
"The human footprint is very much present, not in the brutality of the immediate attack, but in a form of chronic negligence."
It is nothing short of a miracle. Following the catastrophic glacier collapse that tore through the Valais village of Blatten, only one person remains missingâa statistic that defies the sheer brutality of the event. Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis did not mince words addressing the 4,000 delegates at the Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction in Geneva on Tuesday. He characterized the survival rate as an anomaly in the face of such overwhelming natural force, urging the international community to "spring into action" immediately.
The Blatten disaster serves as a terrifying wake-up call. While the loss of life was mercifully low, the event underscores the volatile reality of the Swiss Alps in a warming world. Cassis used this platform not just to express relief, but to pivot immediately to the offensive, demanding a robust, science-based approach to prevention. The message from Geneva is clear: luck is not a strategy, and next time, Switzerland may not be so fortunate.
Switzerland is already putting its money where its mouth is, pouring a staggering CHF 2-3 billion annually into domestic disaster risk reduction. Yet, as the ice crumbles, parliamentarians are clamoring for even more resources to secure the nation's treacherous terrain. This financial commitment is massive, but necessary. Beyond its borders, the Confederation contributes another CHF 250 million to global safety effortsâa figure that some fear could be threatened by rising domestic costs.
However, Patricia Danzi, head of the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC), firmly rejected the notion of a zero-sum game. "I donât think we should pit the two against each other," she declared to reporters. Danzi emphasized that Switzerland's role isn't just about writing checks; it is about exporting vital expertise. The Swiss model of defense against nature is a premium export, and cutting aid to developing nations to fund local walls would be a strategic failure. We possess the technical know-how to rebuild, and hoarding that knowledge is not an option.
Cassis delivered a stinging indictment of humanity's role in these catastrophes. "The human footprint is very much present," he asserted, "not in the brutality of the immediate attack, but in a form of chronic negligence." This is not merely bad weather; it is the accumulated debt of decades of inaction. The Blatten landslide, according to UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed, could have "cost an immeasurable number of lives" had the timing been different.
Mohammed escalated the rhetoric, slamming global leadership for their lethargy. "Political will has fallen far short of what is needed," she warned. The statistics are damning: a mere 35 countries are responsible for nearly 85% of global greenhouse gas emissions. These nations hold the power to turn the tide. If they fail to act, the financial and human cost of dealing with "enormous disasters" on a daily basis will eventually bankrupt even the wealthiest nations. The link is undeniable: Celeste Saulo of the WMO confirmed Blatten was a "powerful warning" of a warming world.
Technology saved lives in Blatten, but it cannot save the landscape. While early warning systems proved their worth, preventing a mass casualty event, Amina Mohammed delivered a sobering reality check: alarms "cannot prevent glaciers from disappearing." We are treating the symptoms while the disease rages on. The effectiveness of alerts is a triumph of Swiss engineering, but it is a temporary shield against a permanent shift in the climate.
The melting permafrost and collapsing slopes are symptoms of a planetary fever that no siren can cure. As the WMO establishes a direct link between the Blatten collapse and climate change, the conclusion is inescapable. We can build higher walls and install louder sirens, but without a radical shift in environmental policy from the world's top emitters, Switzerland's mountains will continue to crumble. The warning has been sounded; the question remains whether the world is truly listening.