Switzerland goes to the polls this week on a referendum that would constitutionally cap its population at 10 million. If passed, the measure would force the government to tighten immigration rules whenever the threshold approaches. The UK, which has its own fraught relationship with immigration targets, is watching closely. For Dr. Helena Vance, Science & Climate Correspondent, the proposal raises deeper questions about planetary boundaries and the physical limits of growth.
The Swiss referendum is often framed in political terms: a battle between nativist impulses and liberal openness. But the underlying driver is physical. Switzerland, like much of Europe, is feeling the pressure of climate change on its resources. Glacial melt is reducing water supply in summer. Housing is scarce. Energy demands are rising. As the world warms, every additional person represents a net increase in consumption and emissions. The unspoken truth is that no country can grow indefinitely on a finite planet.
Data from the Swiss Federal Office for the Environment shows that per capita ecological footprint in Switzerland is about 4.5 global hectares, more than double the globally sustainable level. Adding another 500,000 people to reach 10 million would require an additional 2.25 million hectares of bioproductive land, roughly half the country's land area. The physics are simple: you cannot exceed carrying capacity without depleting natural capital.
The UK government's own migration policy, which has oscillated between net-zero and net-positive targets, relies on the assumption that population growth can be decoupled from environmental impact through technology and efficiency. But decoupling is happening too slowly. Global carbon intensity fell by only 1.2% in 2022, far short of the 7% annual decline needed to meet Paris Agreement goals. Switzerland's approach, while politically incendiary, acknowledges a hard constraint that UK policy instruments have yet to face.
Some argue that capping population is a blunt instrument, that it discriminates against the global poor who have contributed least to climate emissions. This is a valid ethical concern. But the Swiss proposal is not a ban on immigration; it is a management threshold. The UK could learn from the precision of Swiss data: the referendum ties the cap to a measurable metric, allowing for adjustments based on real-time environmental monitoring. It is a form of adaptive governance, not a xenophobic reaction.
The problem with the UK's current approach, by contrast, is that it treats immigration as a variable that can be optimised for economic growth without regard to ecological limits. The Office for National Statistics projects that the UK population could reach 85 million by 2045. At current consumption levels, that would require an additional 10 million hectares of productive land. The country does not have that space. The result will be either a collapse in living standards, a massive increase in imports from strained ecosystems abroad, or both.
Switzerland's referendum is a canary in the coal mine for the Anthropocene. As biosphere collapse accelerates, every nation will be forced to ask: how many people can we support within planetary boundaries? The answer will not be comfortable. It requires confronting the foundational assumption of modern politics: that growth is always good.
Whether or not the Swiss vote passes, the question it raises will not go away. The UK immigration policy experts analysing the result should not be looking at border controls. They should be looking at thermodynamics. Because you cannot negotiate with the second law. Every person needs energy and matter, and the planet is limited.








