WATER WORLD
France, Switzerland agree on Rhone, Lake Geneva water management
France, Switzerland agree on Rhone, Lake Geneva water management
by AFP Staff Writers
Geneva Sept 4, 2025
France and Switzerland on Thursday signed two agreements on how to manage their shared waters of Lake Geneva and the River Rhone -- an increasingly pressing issue as climate change takes its toll. The Rhone, which originates in a Swiss Alpine glacier, flows into Lake Geneva, exits at the western end and eventually enters neighbouring France. "With the gradual disappearance of glaciers, the Rhone will become increasingly dependent on rainwater," France's deputy foreign trade minister Laurent Saint-Martin said at Thursday's signing ceremony in Geneva. This will lead to greater "unpredictability" in the river flow and will increase the risk of flooding and low water levels, he warned. Along with the Rhone, Lake Geneva -- the biggest natural lake in Western Europe -- is used for everything from fishing and agriculture to recreation and drinking water, as well as for cooling French nuclear reactors. At the western end of the lake, Switzerland's Geneva canton has long managed the flow of the River Rhone via a dam, based on its own hydroelectricity needs and compliance with lake levels defined in an agreement with other Swiss cantons. But in January 2012, following a severe drought, France asked Switzerland to develop a framework for integrated water management between the two countries. More than a decade later, in 2023, Switzerland declared itself "ready to negotiate", with the talks culminating in Thursday's signing. The more operational agreement on the regulation of Lake Geneva's waters paves the way for "Franco-Swiss crisis management units", Saint-Martin said, adding that they would be activated when lake levels or the flow of the Rhone approach certain thresholds. The other agreement, concerning cooperation on the transboundary waters of the Rhone, meanwhile establishes a Bilateral Cooperation Commission, with a presidency alternating between the two countries. It will be tasked with providing a common vision and facilitating the transboundary water management between existing bodies, the Swiss environment, transport and energy ministry said.apo/nl/rjm/rlp Related Links
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics
Tweet

WATER WORLD
1 in 4 people lack access to safe drinking water: UN
Geneva (AFP) Aug 26, 2025
More than two billion people worldwide still lack access to safely-managed drinking water, the United Nations said Tuesday, warning that progress towards universal coverage was moving nowhere near quickly enough. The UN's health and children's agencies said a full one in four people globally were without access to safely-managed drinking water last year, with over 100 million people remaining reliant on drinking surface water - for example from rivers, ponds and canals. The World Health Org ... read more

WATER WORLD
Kids age five to take gun safety class in US state of Tennessee

UN says Afghan quake could impact 'hundreds of thousands'

Floods leave women struggling in Pakistan's relief camps

FEMA employees suspended over letter critical of Trump admin

WATER WORLD
Indonesian islanders taking Swiss concrete giant to court over climate

Rice University scientists launch powerful new online tool to streamline mineral identification

Worlds tallest bridge clears load capacity trials

Firefighting games spark at Gamescom 2025

WATER WORLD
Cooling La Nina may return in coming months: UN

New wave: sea power turned into energy at Los Angeles port

New wave: Sea power turned into energy at Los Angeles port

Can a giant seawall save Indonesia's disappearing coast?

WATER WORLD
Once king of the seas, a giant iceberg is finally breaking up

Algal blooms shaped global carbon cycle during Antarctic Cold Reversal

Glaciers in Tajikistan show signs of irreversible decline as snowfall drops

Denmark summons US diplomat over Greenland 'interference'

WATER WORLD
USDA backs FAU led FogAg platform to advance precision farming

Frost, hail, heat sour season for Turkey's lemon growers

In oil-rich Oman, efforts to preserve frankincense 'white gold'

'Cocktail' of bacteria, fungi makes the perfect chocolate, study finds

WATER WORLD
Searchers retrieve bodies as Afghan quake toll expected to rise

Villages marooned after deadly floods in India's Punjab

Scramble for survivors as Afghan earthquake death toll passes 1,400

Mexico tourist zone braces for Hurricane Lorena

WATER WORLD
Landslide flattens Sudan village, kills more than 1,000: armed group

Landslide wipes out Sudan village, killing hundreds

Sudan recovers 270 bodies after Darfur landslide: rebel group

How millennia of history vanished in Sudan's war

WATER WORLD
AI helps UK woman rediscover lost voice after 25 years

New Ethiopian fossil find reveals unknown Australopithecus species alongside early Homo

Scrumped fruit shaped ape evolution and human fondness for alcohol

Cold climate origins of primates challenge long held tropical forest theory