Haute-Savoie
Haute-Savoie is a department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region of Southeastern France, bordering both Switzerland and Italy. Its prefecture is Annecy. To the north is Lake Geneva; to the south and southeast are Mont Blanc and the Aravis mountain ranges.
It holds its name from the Savoy historical region, as does the department of Savoie, located south of Haute-Savoie. In 2016, it had a population of 801,416. Its subprefectures are Bonneville, Saint-Julien-en-Genevois and Thonon-les-Bains. The French entrance to the Mont Blanc Tunnel into Italy is in Haute-Savoie. It is noted for winter sports; the first Winter Olympic Games were held at Chamonix in 1924.
History
Before 1860, the territory occupied by modern Haute-Savoie and the adjoining department of Savoie had been part of the Kingdom of Sardinia since the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713. Annexation of the region by France was formalized in the Treaty of Turin on.From November 1942 to September 1943, Haute-Savoie was subjected to military occupation by Fascist Italy. The Maquis des Glières operated from Haute-Savoie.
Politics
Departmental Council of Haute-Savoie
The Departmental Council of Haute-Savoie has 34 seats. As of 2020, 15 councillors are part of the Haute-Savoie Union group, 14 are part of the Avenir Haute-Savoie group and 5 are part of the Union du Centre group. Christian Monteil had been President of the Departmental Council since 2008.Members of the National Assembly
Haute-Savoie elected the following members of the National Assembly during the 2017 legislative election:Senators
Haute-Savoie sends three Senators to Parliament. Loïc Hervé and Cyril Pellevat were both elected in 2014; Sylviane Noël took office in 2018.Geography
Haute-Savoie comprises four arrondissements, divided into 281 communes and 17 cantons.To the north, it borders the Swiss Canton of Geneva and Lake Geneva; to the east the Swiss Canton of Valais and Italy's Aosta Valley; to the west the French department of Ain, and to the south the department of Savoie.
Haute-Savoie has the largest range of elevations of all the departments in France; the lowest point is in the Rhône River Valley, and the highest Mont Blanc at. Some of the world's best-known ski resorts are in Haute-Savoie.
The terrain of the department includes the Alpine Mont Blanc Range; the French Prealps of the Aravis Range, the Chablais, Bornes and Bauges Alps; and the peneplains of Genevois haut-savoyard and Albanais. Its mountainous terrain makes mountain passes important to trade and economic life. Some of the most important are the Col de la Forclaz and the Mont Blanc Tunnel, linking Chamonix to Courmayeur in the Aosta Valley.
Forests
As of 1996, of Haute-Savoie is forested, compared to 34.4 percent for the Rhone-Alpes region and 27.1 percent for France as a whole. Of the forested area is managed for timber and other forest products, with the remaining having no commercial value or used for outdoor recreation.National nature reserves are designated by the French government as areas where an outstanding natural heritage is present in both rare and typical areas in terms of species and geology. Management is charged to local organizations, with direction and evaluation focusing on long-term protection for future generations and environmental education. Of the of land not managed for timber, Haute-Savoie has nine national nature reserves totaling.
- Aiguilles Rouges National Nature Reserve -
- Bout du Lac d'Annecy National Nature Reserve -
- Carlaveyron National Nature Reserve -
- Contamines-Montjoie National Nature Reserve -
- Delta de la Dranse National Nature Reserve -
- Passy National Nature Reserve -
- Roc de Chère National Nature Reserve -
- Sixt-Passy National Nature Reserve -
- Vallon de Bérard National Nature Reserve -
Lakes
Demographics
Population development since 1861:Economy
Agriculture
In 2006 approximately of land was suitable for agriculture, of which was arable land suitable for market gardening, cultivation or pasture; was orchards; was vineyards, and was alpine tundra or grasses.There were 4,450 farmers in 1999, 4,800 farmers and over 1,700 full-time farm employees at the end of 2006. In 1999, crop production was valued at €71.5 million and animal production at €165.4 million.
Dairy production is a large part of the Haute-Savoie economy, earning €117.2 million in 2006 and representing 74 percent of the net animal-product worth. Cattle earned €29.7 million. Cheese production in 1999 was:
- Reblochon - 16,950 tons
- Tomme de Savoie - 5,500 tons
- Emmental - 3,000 tons ; 4,050 tons in 1999
- Raclette raw milk - 2,000 tons
- Abondance - 700 tons
- Tome des Bauges - 650 tons
Crafts
- Food: 955 companies
- Construction: 4,924
- Production: 2,834
- Services: 3,238
Construction and public works
- Construction: 20 percent
- Decoration, electricity, plastering, painting: 70 percent
- Public works: 10 percent
Trade
- Tourism, culture and recreation: 23.7 percent
- Food and restaurants: 22.5 percent
- Hygiene and health: 15.2 percent
- Service: 14.3 percent
- Cars, motorcycles, bicycles: 13.1 percent
- Household equipment, home appliances: 11.2 percent
Retail
- 13 hypermarkets
- 92 supermarkets
- 24 maxidiscounts
- 6 department and variety stores
- 465 other stores
The average expenditure per capita in 2006 was €21,706. With the 2004–2007 rise of the euro, Swiss customer traffic decreased five or six percent.
At the end of 2006, traditional small businesses represented 84 percent of businesses and 40 percent of retail space.
Companies
4,301 companies were established in 2004 in Haute-Savoie: nearly 80 percent in the service sector, with a high percentage offering service to individuals. This accounted for 21.6 percent of new businesses.The most active sectors were real estate, construction, business services and the food industry.
Industry
In 1999, Haute-Savoie had 2,779 industrial companies producing 13.60 percent of all business income.Companies in Haute-Savoie
- Food: Entremont, Evian, Cereal Partners France, La Gerbe Savoyarde, France, Decoration, Besnier, Fruity
- Chemistry-Pharmacy-Medical: Labcatal, Nicholas Roche, Pierre Fabre Galderma, Ivoclar-Vivadent, Corneal, SNCI, Anthogyr
- Commerce: Provencia, Botanic
- Electrical and electronic: Chauvin-Arnoux, DAV, Label, Amphenol Socapex, Cartier, Varilac CEB
- Mechanical equipment: Dassault, adixen Vacuum Products, Bosch-Rexroth, Union Pump-Guinard Pumps
- Home, household equipment: Tefal, Scaime Bourgeois, Mobalpa, Somfy
- Personal items: S.T. Dupont, Rexam Reboul, Gay, Maped, Pilot
- Data: Sopra, Cross Systems
- Machine tools and special machines: Stäubli, Prosys, Mach 1, Techmeta, Wirth and Gruffat, Mecasonic, Almo
- Mechanics: SNR Bearings, Parker Hannifin, Glacier Vandervell, Invensys, Eurodec, Frank and Pignard, Bouverat, Nicomatic, ZF, Sandvik, Rossignol Technology
- Metals and materials: PSB Industries, Pechiney Rhenalu, Fonlem Lachenal
- Plastics: Veka, SMPI, Decoplast
- Sport and leisure goods: Salomon, Mavic, Dynastar, Millet, Fusalp, Eider
- Other: Velsol France, Mecalac, ABMT
Arve Industries is part of 67 "competitiveness clusters" created in 2005.
The cluster is dedicated to mechatronics and includes 60,000 industrial jobs in over 280 companies, 1,200 researchers and 250 patents in 2002.
Among the projects supported by the cluster is inertial tolerancing, a new approach in evaluating the quality of machined parts. Based on the Taguchi loss function, inertia is defined by its deviation from its target. Inertial tolerancing is a research-and-development program supported by the cluster for its member companies. It is led by a research team from the Symme Laboratory of the University of Savoie and the CTDEC. The publication of the French standard NFX 04-008 demonstrates the relevance of topics covered by the cluster.
Other programs involve the production of clean parts, developing new models of customer-supplier relationships to improve the effectiveness of simultaneous engineering tasks, and development of the international visibility of the cluster and its members.
The companies concerned are involved with industrial mechanics, precision engineering, precision turning and sub-assemblies and mechanical assemblies, often associated with integrating technologies such as plastics, electronics and hydraulics.
Markets served by member companies of the cluster include transport, production and distribution of electricity, hydraulics, medical and health-related.
Research
The research sector in Haute-Savoie filed 201 patents in 2000. It is represented by:- Laboratory for Particle Physics in Annecy-le-Vieux
- Technology Center Engineering Industries
- Research laboratories related to Polytech Savoie, ESIA and Savoy University
- Technical center for screw-machining industry in Cluses
- The Thésame - mechatronics and management
Services
- Hotels and restaurants - 26.5 percent
- Real estate activities - 24.6 percent
- Consulting and assistance - 14.0 percent
- Transportation - 6.1 percent
- Financial activities - 6.2 percent
Tourism
- 1,250 - Rural lodgings
- 803 - Hotels
- 453 - Guest rooms
- 191 - Campsites
- 70 - Bed-and-breakfasts
- 40 - Mountain huts
Cross-border workers
Many people who live in Haute-Savoie work in Switzerland. The phenomenon has accelerated since bilateral agreements concluded between Switzerland and the European Union, of which a significant part concerned free movement of people. In 2007, commuting increased over 12%.Effective June 1, 2007, a resident of Haute-Savoie may freely work in Switzerland. The department and municipalities receive compensation allocated to municipalities in proportion to the number of border residents there. Following an agreement signed in Geneva in 1973, the Canton of Geneva transferred to Haute-Savoie 3.5 percent of total worker compensation, equivalent in December 2006 to €77.687 million.
Export
Exports are an important part of the economy; forty percent of Haute-Savoie employees work for exporting firms. Exports are primarily to Germany, the United States, Switzerland, Italy and the United Kingdom. Imports come mainly from Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom, Switzerland and the United States.Taxation
Haute-Savoie has property and income taxes. In 2006, 312,823 households were subject to property taxes and 27,747 were exempt.The average income tax per household was €25,621 in 2007.
Transport
Haute Savoie is served by the A41 and A43 highways. Annecy is accessible from Lyon, with an estimated travel time between two and three hours in normal traffic. Since it is closer to Geneva, the new highway connects the two cities in about an hour.Meythet Airport in Annecy has Air France Regional round-trip service to Paris Orly.
Saint-Gervais is the only railroad station directly serving a ski resort. The main rail line serves Annecy-Annemasse-Geneva. The Annecy railway station has TGV departures and arrivals to and from Paris via the high-speed line from Lyon Part-Dieu.
History
- Savoy - Historical region
- House of Savoy - Ruling dynasty of Savoy from 1032 to 1860
- Duchy of Savoy - Rulers of Savoy region from 1416 to 1720
- Kingdom of Sardinia - 1720 to 1860.
Language
- Arpitan language
- French language
Places
- Lake Annecy - The third largest lake in France.
- Lake Geneva - Lake which joins Upper Savoy and Switzerland.
Wine
- French wine - Haute-Savoie AOC Wines
- Savoy wine or Wine of Savoie Allobrogie