Council of Europe Launches Investigation into Swiss Wolf Policy
Standing Committee of Bern Convention to examine Switzerland's wolf management approach following complaint by conservation groups
Standing Committee of Bern Convention to examine Switzerland's wolf management approach following complaint by conservation groups

"In our opinion, such an approach is clearly not compatible with the Bern Convention."
"The downgrading of wolf protection is not a free pass to shoot wolves en masse."
Switzerlandâs controversial wolf management strategy has collided with international law. In a stunning rebuke, the Standing Committee of the Bern Convention has unanimously decided to launch a formal investigation into the nation's aggressive culling policies. This decision marks a significant victory for conservation groups CH-Wolf and Avenir Loup Lynx Jura (ALLJ), whose complaints have successfully pierced the armor of Swiss federal policy.
The investigation signals that the Council of Europe is no longer willing to turn a blind eye to what critics call "arbitrary" wildlife management. While the Swiss Federal Office for the Environment (FOEN) attempted to defend its stance in Strasbourg, the presentation was met with palpable skepticism from international peers. This is not merely a procedural review; it is a direct challenge to the sovereignty of Swiss environmental policy, suggesting that the nation's preventive shooting measures may fundamentally violate the 1979 treaty designed to protect European wildlife. The message from Strasbourg is loud and clear: domestic political pressure does not override international conservation commitments.
At the heart of this international dispute lies a battle over numbers. Conservationists have slammed the Swiss authorities for establishing a threshold of just 12 wolf packs across the entire countryâa figure they argue is dangerously low and scientifically baseless. Critics contend that the government has sliced the nation into five arbitrary regulation regions to justify lower population counts, rather than adhering to biological realities.
According to Christina Steiner, president of CH-Wolf, the current management plan is designed solely to facilitate preventive culls rather than ensure species survival. The scientific consensus paints a starkly different picture: a favorable conservation status requires a minimum of 20 packs to ensure genetic diversity and long-term viability. By setting the bar at nearly half the recommended level, Swiss authorities are accused of prioritizing agricultural convenience over ecological integrity. This "creative accounting" has now drawn the ire of European watchdogs, who view the discrepancy not as a difference of opinion, but as a potential breach of the Bern Convention.
Confusion reigns following a separate vote earlier this week, but the Council of Europe is setting the record straight. While a two-thirds majority of member countries voted to lower the wolf's status from "strictly protected" to "protected," this bureaucratic shift does not signal open season on the predator. Germanyâs spokesperson issued a stern warning during the proceedings: a downgraded status is not a "free pass" to shoot wolves en masse.
The distinction is critical. Even under the "protected" label, the wolf remains a shielded species under international law. The obligation to maintain a favorable conservation statusâscientifically pinned at 20 packsâremains binding. This creates a precarious diplomatic tightrope for Switzerland. The federal government cannot use the recent status change as a shield for its current aggressive culling tactics. The investigation proves that the Bern Convention's enforcement mechanisms are active and that the international community is watching closely to ensure that "management" does not devolve into eradication.
The clock is now ticking for the Swiss government. The opening of this investigation dossier triggers an immediate countdown: Switzerland must report back to the Standing Committee in spring 2025. This gives federal authorities less than six months to justify their methodology or overhaul their approach to satisfy European standards.
This deadline places the Federal Council in a vice grip. They must navigate the intense domestic pressure from farmers and alpine communities who demand fewer wolves, while simultaneously appeasing a European body that holds the legal high ground. If the report delivered next spring fails to address the concerns regarding the 12-pack threshold and preventive shooting, Switzerland could face further legal censure. The upcoming months will be a critical test of Swiss diplomacy and environmental policy, determining whether the wolf remains a permanent fixture of the Alpine landscape or becomes a casualty of political maneuvering.