Cracked mud is picture at sunrise in the dried shores of Lake Gruyere affected by continous drought near the western Switzerland village of Avry-devant-Pont. A leading climate scientist warned on 12 April 2011 that Europe should take action over increasing drought and floods, stressing that some climate change trends were clear despite variations in predictions. GettyGeneva (AFP) April 20, 2011 – Swiss officials began moving trout from a river this week to save them from plunging water levels, amid one of the worst droughts to hit the country in 150 years.

“2011 is off to a good start to finish as one of the most significant droughts since 1864,” the year when records began in Switzerland, said Olivier Duding, a climatologist from Swiss weather service Meteosuisse. Across Switzerland, rainfall measured from January to date is half that of previous years’ average. Eastern Switzerland’s ski resort of Sils-Maria has recorded the beginning of 2011 as the driest since records began. In canton Zurich, officials began moving trout this week from the river Toess before their habitat dried up. Meanwhile, cracked mud line the shores of western Switzerland’s Lake Gruyere where water levels have also plunged. According to Meteosuisse, the drought in western Switzerland over the last 12 months is as severe as those recorded in 1884 and 1921. …

Swiss face one of worst droughts on record