Swiss perspectives in 10 languages

Poll: Most Swiss back 30km/h speed limit in urban areas

Lausanne street in canton Vaud.
In September the city of Lausanne introduced a 30km/h speed limit on 122 streets between 10pm-6am to reduce noise pollution – a Swiss first. Keystone / Jean-christophe Bott

Most Swiss residents would be in favour of a 30 kilometre (18 miles) per hour speed limit in urban areas, a survey has found.

A poll by the Swiss Council for Accident Prevention (BPA), published on TuesdayExternal link, found that 52% of respondents support a 30km/h speed limit on city streets. An exception would be made for main thoroughfares, which would keep the current speed limit of 50km/h.

The proposal was well supported by elderly people (59% in favour) and women (54%), the poll found. The idea was particularly well received in Italian-speaking regions, where two-thirds of respondents were in favour, followed by French-speaking regions (55%); German-speaking regions were more mixed (50%).

The BPA survey coincided with an announcementExternal link on Tuesday by the town of Sion, the capital of canton Valais, that it plans to reduce the speed limit – day and night – in much of the city to 30km/h from spring 2022. The Sion authorities say they want to improve road safety, noise pollution, air quality and conflicts between road users.

This decision follows a similar move last month by the city of Lausanne, which introduced a 30km/h speed limit on 122 streets between 10pm-6am to reduce noise pollution – a Swiss first.

Other Swiss cities are interested in the idea, including Geneva, Zurich and Winterthur.

A speed limit of 30km/h (18mph) came into force across Paris in neighbouring France on August 30 in a drive to cut accidents, and reduce noise and pollution. A poll found that 59% of Parisians are in favour of the measure, but some businesses are among those opposed.

In Europe, similar 30km/h limits are already in force in the French towns of Grenoble and Lille, as well as Bilbao in Spain, and the Belgian capital, Brussels.

More

Most Read
Swiss Abroad

Most Discussed

News

Zurich geophysicists discover unusual zones in the Earth's mantle

More

Swiss scientists discover unusual zones in Earth’s mantle

This content was published on Using high-resolution models to study the Earth's mantle, scientists have identified zones of rocks in the lower mantle that are colder, or have a different composition, than surrounding rocks.

Read more: Swiss scientists discover unusual zones in Earth’s mantle
Demand in the Swiss office market continues to fall

More

More offices stand empty in Switzerland

This content was published on More and more offices are standing empty in Switzerland's major cities. Nevertheless, new office constructions are likely to increase in the future, a study shows.

Read more: More offices stand empty in Switzerland
Army no longer gives "Tenü A" to everyone and saves millions

More

Swiss army cuts uniform distribution to save millions

This content was published on Members of the Swiss Armed Forces will only receive a distinctive grey dress uniform, the famous "Tenü A", for representational purposes in the future as a cost-cutting measure to save CHF55 million.

Read more: Swiss army cuts uniform distribution to save millions
Swiss woman dies in seaplane crash in Australia

More

Swiss, Danish tourists among three dead in Australian plane crash

This content was published on A light aircraft crashed during take-off from a tourist island in Western Australia, killing three people including Swiss and Danish tourists and injuring three others, authorities said on Wednesday.

Read more: Swiss, Danish tourists among three dead in Australian plane crash

In compliance with the JTI standards

More: SWI swissinfo.ch certified by the Journalism Trust Initiative

You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!

If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.

SWI swissinfo.ch - a branch of Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR

SWI swissinfo.ch - a branch of Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR