Professor Reynard, you and your team at the University of Lausanne are researching the multifunctionality of alpine hydropower infrastructure. What exactly does this mean?
Most dams in Switzerland were built for a single purpose: to generate power. When the concessions were granted, some longstanding uses of water were protected, such as irrigating meadows in the Valais. Over time, the reservoirs have been granted additional uses, such as supplying drinking water or producing artificial snow. The dams have also been incorporated into flood protection concepts. Some uses, such as climbing the dam wall, use the infrastructure rather than the water. We’re studying the multifunctionality of the alpine dams from different angles: the history of the multiple uses of water, when the new uses emerged, the perceptions of the role of water and energy by different stakeholder groups, as well as institutional aspects of multifunctional water management, in particular the role of concessions.