In the Val dâAnniviers region, the 'Fios fault' near Grimentz has expanded and continues to be actively monitored. Authorities are preparing safety measures and local evacuation plans over fears that a section of the mountain could collapse.

"Those present were able to ask any questions they wanted to a number of experts, particularly in geology and hydrogeology."
"The main concern was how much time they would have to evacuate, if they had to do so, and what measures were planned for the Bord district and its 50 or so residents."
A massive, gaping wound in the Swiss landscape is widening by the hour. In the Val dâAnniviers, the 'Fios fault' has now torn open a staggering 250-metre fissure across the mountainside, signaling a geological crisis that demands immediate attention. This is not a dormant threat; the earth is moving beneath our feet. The fault is currently expanding by a critical 2 to 4 millimetres every single day, a relentless pace that has geologists on high alert.
At stake is a colossal 500,000 cubic metres of unstable earthâenough material to bury a neighborhoodâteetering precariously above the valley. The structural integrity of the mountain has been compromised, a direct consequence of the punishing floods of 2018 and 2024. These water events eroded the riverbed that acts as the mountain's foundational bedrock, effectively pulling the rug out from under the slope. As the crack widens to nearly a meter in some places, the question is no longer if the land is unstable, but rather how violent the inevitable correction will be.
Authorities are deploying an arsenal of high-tech surveillance equipment to track every tremor and shift. This is a full-scale scientific operation. Since the fault's discovery in October 2025, the site has been rigged with extensometers, laser scanners, and webcams that feed real-time data to experts. Weekly drone flights now scour the terrain from above, creating detailed 3D maps to detect even the slightest acceleration in the slope's descent.
To mitigate the immediate risk, crews have already slashed down large trees on the unstable slope to reduce weight and drag. While the 'disaster scenario'âa sudden, catastrophic release of the entire 500,000 cubic metre massâremains a terrifying possibility, experts are currently banking on a 'preferred scenario' of successive, smaller collapses. However, nature is unpredictable. Consequently, the area is strictly off-limits. The message to the public is blunt and non-negotiable: stay away. An automated alert system is primed to trigger the moment the ground movement accelerates beyond critical thresholds.
The danger flows downstream. The most alarming threat posed by the Fios fault isn't just the landslide itself, but what lies directly in its path: the Navizence River. A major collapse could dam the river, creating a temporary, unstable lake that would inevitably burst. This would unleash a torrent of water and debris, threatening to wipe out infrastructure and flood the valley floor, particularly during the high-risk snowmelt season.
This hydrological time bomb places the village of Chippis and the vital Val dâAnniviers electricity network in the crosshairs. The potential for a flash flood caused by a dam breach is a nightmare scenario that planners are racing to mitigate. An emergency power line is scheduled for completion by early summer to ensure the region doesn't go dark in the event of a catastrophe. The Navizence, usually a lifeline for the valley, has become a potential vector of destruction, forcing engineers to calculate flow rates and breach scenarios with extreme urgency.
Panic is not an option, but preparation is mandatory. In the village of Chippis, the reality of the threat has mobilized the community. A staggering 300 residentsânearly 20% of the entire populationâpacked into a public information session this Monday, demanding answers and assurances. They are grappling with the logistics of survival: evacuation routes, warning times, and the safety of their homes.
"The main concern was how much time they would have to evacuate," stated Olivier Perruchoud, president of Chippis, highlighting the anxiety gripping the Bord district, where 50 residents live in the immediate danger zone. Authorities are leaving nothing to chance. Civil protection shelters in neighboring villages have already been reserved, and specific protocols are in place for the Cimetière bridge, which risks becoming a choke point for debris. The Swiss machinery of civil defense is grinding into gear; while they hope for the best, Chippis is undeniably preparing for the worst.