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Dossiers
- Summit on Peace in Ukraine
- Support of the Confederation for the people affected by the war in Ukraine
- Switzerland in the UN Security Council
- International Cooperation: Flexible approaches in an unstable world
- The 2022 Federal Presidency: key messages and meetings
- Ukraine Recovery Conference (URC2022) in Lugano
- AVIS28 – Inspiring Switzerland to be ready for the future
- Sustainable Swiss embassies
- Diplomacy through the ages
- Swiss protecting power mandates for the United States and Cuba
- OSCE Chairmanship 2014
- Switzerland commemorates the victims of the Holocaust
- Switzerland's position on the Middle East conflict
- Swiss commitment to humanitarian demining in 2023
- Sustainable Swiss embassies
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Leading by example – reports from the embassies
- Abu Dhabi – Certified sustainable interior design
- Algiers – Mashrabiyas: a model of sustainable architecture in Algeria
- Brasilia – Solar power in Brazil: sustainable and cost-effective
- Canberra – A comprehensive sustainability concept implemented in Australia
- Harare – A pioneer in sustainability with solar energy
- Moscow – Efficient waste management: small changes with big impacts
- Nairobi – The new Swiss embassy: a step towards sustainability
- New Delhi – Cooling with solar energy in India
- San José – Certified sustainability in Costa Rica
- Seoul – Renewable energy sources for the new embassy
- Warsaw - An (almost) complete overhaul
- Berlin – smart sustainability
- Skopje – Concrete steps for a Sustainable Embassy
- Vienna – on the go with the «green Swiss pocket knife»
- Seoul – Renewable energy sources for the new embassy
Seoul – Renewable energy sources for the new embassy
The Swiss embassy in Seoul, South Korea, was demolished in 2014 and a temporary solution found. Since February 2019, the new embassy building has offered the opportunity to optimise sustainable working practices. From now on, energy will be generated from solar and geothermal sources.