AlpWeek 2012 gets underway

Bern, 05.09.2012 - Switzerland is hosting an AlpWeek for the first time. Under the «Renewable Alps» banner, around 350 delegates are meeting in Valposchiavo from 5-8 September to discuss the current and future challenges facing the Alpine region. Opening the event, Director of the Federal Office for Spatial Development (ARE) Maria Lezzi emphasized that further development in the Alps must have a sustainable foundation. A balance between differing interests must therefore be sought.

Maria Lezzi, Director of the Federal Office for Spatial Development (ARE), opened AlpWeek 2012 in Poschiavo (Canton Grisons) alongside Cla Semadeni, former Cantonal Planner, representing Canton Grisons, Dominik Siegrist, President of the International Commission for the Protection of the Alps (CIPRA), and Cassiano Luminati, Chairman of the Valposchiavo regional association. As the current holder of the Alpine Convention presidency, Switzerland is organising the AlpWeek in collaboration with a number of major Alpine associations (see box). 

Strategies to meet the challenges of the future in the Alpine region must take account of differing interests, said Maria Lezzi in her opening speech. «The Alps are neither Heidiland nor the world's biggest power station, but the place where 13 million people live and work.» She continued that, as a territory, the Alps could retain their importance only through a process of continuous renewal. To ensure that this renewal is sustainable, all of the stakeholders in the Alpine region must pull together. Promoting this strong working relationship is one of Switzerland's primary objectives during its presidency of the Alpine Convention. Maria Lezzi therefore called upon the delegates to «renew the Alps together». 

AlpWeek roundup

AlpWeek 2012 is taking place from 5-8 September in Poschiavo – the first time it has been held in Switzerland. Another first is the embedding in this AlpWeek of the Alpine Conference, the meeting of environment ministers from the Alpine Convention states. By bringing the two events together, Switzerland aims to strengthen exchange between the various stakeholders with an interest in the Alps. At AlpWeek 2012, around 400 delegates will discuss the «Renewable Alps» theme in a programme of over 20 panel discussions, workshops and lectures, some of which will run in parallel with each other. Specialists will analyse the current challenges and sketch out possible solutions in papers on transport, governance and energy-efficient construction. For example, the Swiss Federal «Ländlicher Raum» (Rural Areas) Network – a body of representatives from several federal agencies – will give a presentation on the benefits of pilot projects. Entitled «Synergien im ländlichen Raum» (Synergies in Rural Areas), it will introduce three out of 13 such projects, and will discuss their outcomes as well as their added value for the individual regions and for the federal government. One of these projects, INSCUNTER, aims to promote cross-sectoral collaboration between tourism, forestry, farming and conservation organisations in the Lower Engadine and in Samnaun. Another, the «Energieregion Goms» project, is pursuing a vision that would see Goms in Canton Valais become one of the first «Energy Regions» in the Swiss Alps, while the «Walserweg» project in Canton Grisons is putting together a range of sustainable tourist services for hikers. 

Alpine Convention and AlpWeek
The Alpine Convention is the world's first binding treaty under international law designed to protect a mountain region. The Contracting Parties are Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Liechtenstein, Monaco, Slovenia, Switzerland and the EU. In the early 1990s, these states drafted a framework convention, which came into force in March 1995 and was ratified by Switzerland in 1999. In Switzerland, responsibility for the Alpine Convention lies with the Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications (DETEC). Within DETEC, the Federal Office for Spatial Development (ARE) takes the lead on individual activities. AlpWeek 2012 is being staged as part of the Swiss Presidency of the Alpine Convention. It is being organised by the Federal Office for Spatial Development (ARE) and the International Commission for the Protection of the Alps (CIPRA), as well as the «Alliance in the Alps» network of municipalities, the International Scientific Committee on Research in the Alps (ISCAR), the Alpine Network of Protected Areas (ALPARC) and the Club Arc Alpin (CAA), in close collaboration with the Regione Valposchiavo.


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Federal Office for Spatial Development ARE
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Federal Office for the Environment FOEN
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