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Acceptée Genève Environnement, climat et énergie 29 novembre 2009

CEVA — the credit that launched the Léman Express (Geneva vote of 2009)

The rail link between Cornavin, Eaux-Vives and Annemasse is not a new idea: a first agreement between the Confederation, the federal railways and Geneva dates back to 1912. For almost a century the project slept in the drawers.In 2009 the…

Oui — 61.2% Non — 38.8%
Participation : n.d.% · Conseil d'État et Grand Conseil genevois (loi du 26 juin 2009, crédit complémentaire de 113,5 millions) ; référendum lancé par des comités d'opposants
L'enjeu de l'époque

The rail link between Cornavin, Eaux-Vives and Annemasse is not a new idea: a first agreement between the Confederation, the federal railways and Geneva dates back to 1912. For almost a century the project slept in the drawers.

In 2009 the file finally moved. On 26 June the cantonal parliament voted a supplementary credit of 113.5 million francs to close the financing of the infrastructure known as CEVA. Opponents — mainly residents fearing nuisances — launched a referendum.

On 29 November 2009 Geneva voters decided: 61.2% in favour, with nearly every municipality backing it. The “project of the century” was under way. Ten years later it would become the Léman Express.

Methodological note — AfterVote judges only the verifiable arguments in light of the facts observed since the vote. Promises and fears that remain open or unverifiable are not adjudicated.
The verdict at the ballot box (29 November 2009)
▲ Yes (accepted)
61.2% in favour of the supplementary credit
• Nearly every municipality in favour
• Credit of 113.5 million to close the financing
▼ No (rejected)
38.8% against
• Opposition concentrated among some residents
• Referendum launched by local committees

The camps

▲ Yes camp
Geneva cantonal government, notably Mark Muller (Liberal, in charge of planning)
Almost all parties (Liberals, Social Democrats, Greens, Christian Democrats) and a large parliamentary majority
Federal railways, public-transport circles and the ATE/VCS transport-and-environment association
▼ No camp
Residents' committees, in particular in the Champel district (under which a tunnel runs)
The “better Franco-Genevan mobility” association and various local opponents
Individual opponents fearing vibrations and structure-borne noise along the route

Arguments and verdicts

▲ Arguments FOR (Yes camp)
A cross-border commuter rail will relieve roads and border crossings.
“CEVA is the backbone of tomorrow's mobility in Greater Geneva” (Yes camp, 2009).
✓ Confirmed.
Opened in December 2019, the Léman Express born of CEVA formed the largest cross-border rail network in Europe. Ridership exceeded expectations: about 70,000 passengers a day, against the 50,000 hoped for at launch.
Sources: Léman Express, regional press.
A century-old project must finally be built: let us not miss the chance.
“We have waited nearly a hundred years for this link; it must be built now” (Yes camp, 2009).
✓ Confirmed.
Construction began in November 2011 and the structure — 16 km of largely underground track — entered service at the end of 2019. The Geneva rail saga genuinely came out of the ground.
Sources: federal railways, Canton of Geneva.
▼ Arguments AGAINST (No camp)
Residents will suffer vibrations and structure-borne noise along the whole route.
“The people of Champel and elsewhere will pay the price of trains under their buildings” (No camp, 2009).
✗~ Largely did not materialise.
Construction techniques (deep tunnels, anti-vibration devices) largely answered the fears: the network entered service without mass litigation or lasting resident mobilisation. The risk brandished in 2009 did not materialise on the announced scale.
Sources: regional press, Léman Express.
The credit is too heavy for what the project will really deliver.
“We are committing tens of millions with no guarantee of ridership” (No camp, 2009).
✗ Did not materialise.
Ridership exceeded forecasts and the network became the backbone of regional travel. Far from a money pit, the investment proved one of the most structuring in the canton's recent history.
Sources: Léman Express, ridership figures.

The outcome, more than fifteen years on

29.11.2009
Date of the vote
61.2%
Yes (accepted)
≈70,000
Passengers/day (Léman Express)
2019
Entry into service
Worth noting — Conceived in 1912, voted in 2009, opened in 2019: CEVA took over a century to come out of the ground. As the Léman Express it now forms the largest cross-border commuter rail network in Europe — proof that in Geneva good ideas do eventually run, even at walking pace.
Analyse éditoriale
Conclusion

The vote of 29 November 2009 will be remembered as one of the great infrastructure “yeses” of recent Geneva history. By releasing a credit that was modest at the scale of the project, voters authorised the completion of a saga almost a century old.

Hindsight here favours the yes camp. The promises of cross-border mobility were delivered beyond expectations, while the opponents' fears — nuisances for residents, a financial money pit — did not materialise on the announced scale.

CEVA illustrates a Geneva mechanism that is the mirror image of the harbour crossing: when voters say yes to a concrete, financed project, the structure ends up existing. Still, from the first 1912 plan to the 2019 opening, it took more than a hundred years of institutional patience.