Swiss perspectives in 10 languages

Lausanne gets green light for recreational pot smoking trial

Cannabis photo
Cannabis sold at a pharmacy in Basel as part of a pilot project, January 30, 2023. © Keystone / Georgios Kefalas

Lausanne is the latest Swiss city – after Basel and Zurich – to receive approval to launch a pilot project to sell cannabis for recreational use as part of a study into the impact of its regulated supply.

The Lausanne project for the legal sale of cannabis, known as Cann-L, has received the green light from the Federal Office of Public Health (FOPH), the city authorities saidExternal link on Tuesday.

The western city joins Basel (started in 2022) and Zurich (approved in March 2023), whose projects have also been validated by the health office.

+ Cannabis trial: Basel pharmacies to charge black-market prices

The scientific project is intended to study the impact of regulated cannabis supply on the consumption and health of consumers, as well as its impact on the illegal market.

“After the cantonal ethics commission, the FOPH authorisation marks a major step for our project,” said Emilie Moeschler, Lausanne’s city councillor in charge of social cohesion, in a statement.

+ Majority of Swiss support the legalisation of cannabis

The city authorities and its partner, the NGO Addiction Suisse, hope to find around 1,200 people who use cannabis and live in Lausanne to take part in the pilot study. It has been reported that 2,000 people have already expressed an interest on the project’s website.

Cannabis products will be for “personal consumption and in the private sphere”, insist the Lausanne authorities.

The “local and organic” cultivation of cannabis plants can now begin. The first harvest will take place this summer, followed by its preparation. The cannabis sales point, which is not yet known, should open in September.

+ Most CBD cannabis products fail to meet standards, say Swiss chemists

A sales team is being trained to provide advice on consumption and risk reduction as well as existing legislation.

In 2020 the Swiss parliament backed a legal change allowing for the pilot studies to find out more about the effects of recreational use.

+ Read about the economic impact of cannabis legalisation in Switzerland

Growing, consuming and dealing cannabis are all forbidden in Switzerland. But since 2013 anyone caught in possession of up to ten grams of cannabis will receive a fixed CHF100 ($101) fine and not have it put on their criminal record. 

One-third of the Swiss population has admitted to smoking cannabis at some point, while some 200,000 smoke regularly.

In 2008, almost two-thirds of Swiss voters rejected an initiative to decriminalise cannabis for personal consumption; it was the second national vote on the issue in a decade.

News

Across a red and white striped police line and a grassy area and in front of grey, concrete buildings can be seen a white police van with yellow and blue stripes. The door to the van is open and four male police officers in navy uniforms and black vests that say ‘cantonal police’ are standing next to the van.

More

Switzerland knife attack leaves six injured

This content was published on A man injured half a dozen people with knives, two of them seriously, before being arrested on Wednesday in northern Switzerland.  

Read more: Switzerland knife attack leaves six injured
The meeting will be held on June 15 and 16 at the five-star Bürgenstock hotel above Lake Lucerne in central Switzerland.

More

Ukraine peace talks: 50 countries have confirmed participation

This content was published on To date, 50 countries out 160 invited delegations have confirmed they will attend the Ukraine peace conference, held in central Switzerland in mid-June, according to Swiss public radio, RTS.

Read more: Ukraine peace talks: 50 countries have confirmed participation

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