Federal Statistical Office reports dramatic shift in Swiss wood utilization, with energy consumption doubling over two decades while construction use declines significantly.

"Sometimes there is no new tree."
Switzerland is burning its forestsâliterally. In a staggering transformation of the nation's resource management, nearly half of all timber harvested from Swiss woodlands is now destined for the furnace rather than the frame. The Federal Statistical Office confirms a dramatic pivot: the share of wood harvested for energy has doubled in just two decades. This is not a subtle drift; it is a fundamental restructuring of the Swiss timber economy.
Logs and wood chips are feeding a voracious and growing network of boilers and stoves across the cantons. Where Swiss timber once stood as the backbone of alpine architecture, it is now increasingly reduced to ash in the name of heat. This surge represents a critical reallocation of natural capital, driven by a desperate hunger for alternative energy sources. As winter approaches, the nation is no longer just living in its forests; it is consuming them to keep warm, marking a historic shift in how Switzerland values its most iconic natural resource.
While boilers roar, sawmills are going silent. The construction sector is grappling with a severe decline in domestic timber availability for building. In the early 2000s, a robust 70% of harvested wood was processed for construction and carpentryâlocking carbon into the very framework of Swiss homes. Today, that figure has plummeted to a mere 46%.
This statistic is alarming for sustainable architecture advocates. Every log burned is a log that cannot be used to build, creating a direct competition between heating and housing. The decline suggests that the material value of wood is being overtaken by its caloric value. As the percentage of wood destined for sawmills shrinks, the industry confronts a difficult reality: the raw material for traditional Swiss carpentry is being diverted to the energy sector, potentially forcing builders to rely more heavily on imports or less sustainable materials like concrete and steel.
This shift is no accident; it is the result of calculated policy and market forces. Over the last twenty years, the wood-energy sector has expanded aggressively, buoyed by a national push for renewable energy sources. For forest owners, the math is simple and compelling: favorable pricing has turned wood heating into a lucrative revenue stream.
Economics are driving the axe. Forest owners, seeking to maximize returns, are finding eager buyers in the energy market. The expansion of this sector has been steady and deliberate, supported by subsidies and a public desire to move away from fossil fuels. However, this economic incentive creates a paradox. By making wood energy so attractive, the market is effectively cannibalizing the supply for long-term construction use. The financial allure of immediate energy production is currently outweighing the long-term benefits of material application, reshaping the forestry landscape based on the price of a kilowatt-hour.
The sector's success masks a dirty secret: burning wood is far from benign. Critics are sounding the alarm, pointing out that wood combustion releases greenhouse gases on par with oil and coalâand significantly more than natural gas. The romantic image of a wood fire is clouded by the reality of winter smog and increased lung damage across Swiss valleys.
The "carbon neutral" defenseâthat replacement trees eventually absorb the emissionsâis under fire. Critics argue this theory is flawed; sometimes replacement planting fails, and even when it succeeds, the carbon absorption takes decades. In contrast, using wood for construction locks carbon away instantly and avoids the immediate release of pollutants. Switzerland faces a critical environmental dilemma: by prioritizing wood for heat over housing, the nation may be sacrificing air quality and immediate carbon sequestration for a renewable label that, upon closer inspection, looks increasingly gray.