Swiss Federal Armament Office receives around 100 proposals for safely retrieving thousands of tons of munitions from Swiss lakes, with prize money offered for best solutions.

"The problem poses a financial as well as an image risk to the federal government."
A staggering wave of ingenuity has crashed onto the desks of the Federal Armament Office (armasuisse). In a bold response to a national appeal, approximately 100 distinct proposals have been submitted to tackle one of Switzerland's most explosive environmental challenges: the safe retrieval of submerged munitions. This is not merely a suggestion box; it is a high-stakes competition where the three most viable solutions stand to claim a CHF 50,000 prize.
The sheer volume of submissions signals a critical shift in public and private engagement with national safety. A panel of experts is now tasked with sifting through these ideas by May, looking for the technological breakthrough that has eluded authorities for decades. The urgency is palpable. While the government previously hesitated, the flood of ideas demonstrates that the engineering community is ready to confront the errors of the past with the technology of the future.
Beneath the pristine, glass-like surfaces of Lakes Thun, Brienz, and Lucerne lurks a dormant beast weighing 8,000 tons. Between 1918 and 1964, the Swiss military treated these alpine waters as convenient disposal sites, dumping everything from small 4mm rounds to massive 50kg aerial bombs. This was common practice for the era, but today it stands as a colossal environmental debt.
The scale of this dumping is difficult to overstate. We are talking about thousands of tons of iron, copper, brass, and aluminum resting in the deep. While a 2019 monitoring report by the Federal Department of Defense claimed these dumps are not currently hazardous to the water quality, the Swiss Federal Audit Office (SFAO) has rightfully flagged this as a significant image risk for the federal government. The contrast is jarring: Switzerland, a nation renowned for its environmental purity, is grappling with a literal seabed of explosives.
Retrieving these munitions is a logistical nightmare that defies standard salvage operations. The targets are located at crushing depths of 150 to 220 meters, where visibility is near zero and the risks are astronomical. Any attempt to disturb the lakebed must contend with fine sediments up to two meters thick. A clumsy extraction could churn up this silt, blinding remote operators and turning a precision mission into a game of Russian roulette.
The technical variables are immense. The munitions vary wildly in size, from 4mm bullets to 20cm shells, and while most are magnetic iron, dangerous detonators made of non-magnetic copper or aluminum lie hidden in the mix. The current is unpredictable, and the threat of spontaneous explosion remains a terrifying constant. The winning proposal must navigate these perilous waters with surgical precision, ensuring that the cure does not become more dangerous than the disease.
The clock is ticking toward a critical deadline: the Federal Office for the Environment has mandated that these sites be cleaned up by 2040. However, the financial reality of this undertaking is sobering. Estimates for the analysis, surveillance, and ultimate remediation of these sites soar into the hundreds of millions of francs. The CHF 50,000 prize money is a drop in the bucket compared to the capital required to execute the actual cleanup.
This is more than an environmental project; it is a test of national resolve. The Swiss Federal Audit Office has warned of the financial risks, but the cost of inactionāboth to the environment and Switzerland's reputationācould be far higher. As the expert panel prepares to judge the proposals in May, the nation watches. We are moving from a passive era of monitoring to an active era of remediation, demanding a solution that is safe, effective, and financially viable before the 2040 deadline arrives.