Summer farms are seasonal enterprises in
high-elevation mountain regions, established for
and highly specialized in grazing ruminants. This
article synthesizes studies by the Swiss AlpFUTUR
research program on the profitability of and public financial support for summer farms. It
highlights current challenges of Swiss pastoralism and makes
recommendations for future reforms. Profitability hinges on the
size of the summer farms as well as on their ability to create
value added. Particularly for smaller summer farms, key valueadded
strategies appear to be innovative cheese production
and effective direct marketing. Public financial support is
substantial, and the underlying agri-environmental scheme is
relatively sophisticated. Eligibility for public support is based on
both action-oriented and results-oriented criteria. Direct
payments consider not only the number of livestock but also the
duration of their presence on the summer pastures. For each
summer farm, a stocking target is defined based on the
pasture’s carrying capacity. However, this target does not take
into account the wide variation in forage needs between
different meat and milk production systems. During the last
decade, there has been a decline in the number of cattle sent to
summer farms. Understocking is widespread, and the
abandonment of marginal pastures has increased, resulting in
scrub encroachment. The remaining cattle tend to be
concentrated on more productive surfaces to reduce
management costs; this causes overgrazing. More attention
should therefore be given to the accurate enforcement of agrienvironmental
standards and to regional-level agreement on
which surfaces should be abandoned. Supporting traditional
pastoral practices remains an explicit objective of Swiss
agricultural policy. Recently introduced agri-environmental
payment schemes promoting biodiversity conservation can
complement the summer farm subsidies. However,
implementation costs are likely to increase.