fbpx
Wikipedia

Haute-Savoie

Haute-Savoie (pronounced [ot savwa] )[a] 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 range.

Haute-Savoie
Savouè d'Amont (Arpitan)
From top down, left to right: Aiguille du Midi, Lac Vert in Passy, prefecture building in Annecy, a view of Les Houches, Thonon-les-Bains, landscape near Chamonix
Location of Haute-Savoie in France
Coordinates: 46°00′N 06°20′E / 46.000°N 6.333°E / 46.000; 6.333
CountryFrance
RegionAuvergne-Rhône-Alpes
PrefectureAnnecy
SubprefecturesBonneville
Saint-Julien-en-Genevois
Thonon-les-Bains
Government
 • President of the Departmental CouncilMartial Saddier[1]
Area
 • Total4,388 km2 (1,694 sq mi)
Elevation1,160 m (3,810 ft)
Highest elevation
4,810.40 m (15,782.15 ft)
Lowest elevation
250 m (820 ft)
Population
 (2021)[2]
 • Total841,482
 • Rank27th
 • Density190/km2 (500/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
ISO 3166 codeFR-74
Department number74
Arrondissements4
Cantons17
Communes279
^1 French Land Register data, which exclude estuaries and lakes, ponds and glaciers larger than 1 km2
^2 Inventaire forestier départemental, IIIe inventaire 1998

It holds its name from the Savoy historical region, as does the department of Savoie, located south of Haute-Savoie. In 2019, it had a population of 826,094.[3] 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 edit

The historical region of Savoy was governed by the House of Savoy, the ruling dynasty of Savoy from 1032 to 1860. The Duchy of Savoy were rulers of the Savoy region from 1416 to 1720.

The territory occupied by modern Haute-Savoie and the adjoining department of Savoie became part of the Kingdom of Sardinia after the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713. Annexation of the region by France was formalised in the Treaty of Turin on March 24, 1860.

From November 1942 to September 1943, Haute-Savoie was subjected to military occupation by Fascist Italy. The Maquis des Glières (a band of Free French Resistance fighters who opposed the Nazi, Vichy and Milice regimes during World War II) operated from Haute-Savoie. In the winter of 1943–1944, German troops burned down around 500 farms in response to French Resistance activities.

Politics edit

Departmental Council of Haute-Savoie edit

The Departmental Council of Haute-Savoie has 34 seats. As of 2020, fifteen councillors are part of the Haute-Savoie Union group (miscellaneous right), fourteen are part of the Avenir Haute-Savoie group (The Republicans) and five are part of the Union du Centre group (The Centrists). Martial Saddier had been President of the Departmental Council since 2021.

Representation in Paris edit

National Assembly edit

Haute-Savoie elected the following members of the National Assembly in the 2022 legislative election:

Senate edit

Haute-Savoie sends three Senators to Parliament. Loïc Hervé and Cyril Pellevat were both elected in 2014; Sylviane Noël took office in 2018.

Geography edit

 
Haute-Savoie highlighted in brown in the former Rhône-Alpes region, with arrondissements outlined

Haute-Savoie comprises four arrondissements, divided into 279 communes and 17 cantons.[5] 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 250 metres (820 ft) in the Rhône Valley, and the highest Mont Blanc at 4,810.40 metres (15,782.2 ft).[6]: 9  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 (known collectively as L'Avant-pays savoyard).[6]: 9  Its mountainous terrain makes mountain passes important to trade and economic life. Some of the most important are the Col de la Forclaz (which connects Chamonix to the canton of Valais) and the Mont Blanc Tunnel, linking Chamonix to Courmayeur in the Aosta Valley.[6]: 10 

Forests edit

As of 1996, 178,624 hectares (441,390 acres) of Haute-Savoie is forested (38.8 percent of the total land area), compared to 34.4 percent for the Rhone-Alpes region and 27.1 percent for France as a whole. Of the forested area 141,063 hectares (348,570 acres) (79 percent) is managed for timber and other forest products, with the remaining 37,561 hectares (92,820 acres) having no commercial value or used for outdoor recreation.[6]: 12 

 
Map of Haute-Savoie

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.[7] Of the 37,561 hectares (92,820 acres) of land not managed for timber, Haute-Savoie has nine national nature reserves totaling 24,542 hectares (60,640 acres).[8]

Lakes edit

 
Aerial view of Lake Annecy from the southeast

Haute-Savoie has significant freshwater resources. Lake Annecy is a major attraction, along with the town of Évian-les-Bains, perhaps the best-known town on the French shore of Lake Geneva, and known worldwide for its Evian mineral water. Haute-Savoie is entirely within the watershed of the Rhone.

Demographics edit

Population development since 1861:

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1861267,496—    
1872273,027+0.19%
1881274,087+0.04%
1891268,471−0.21%
1901263,803−0.18%
1911255,137−0.33%
1921235,668−0.79%
1931252,794+0.70%
1936259,961+0.56%
1946270,565+0.40%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1954293,852+1.04%
1962329,230+1.43%
1968378,550+2.35%
1975447,795+2.43%
1982494,505+1.43%
1990568,286+1.75%
1999631,679+1.18%
2006696,254+1.40%
2011746,994+1.42%
2016801,416+1.42%
source:[9][10]

Principal towns edit

The most populous commune is Annecy, the prefecture. As of 2019, there are 7 communes with more than 15,000 inhabitants:[3]

Commune Population (2019)
Annecy 130,721
Annemasse 36,582
Thonon-les-Bains 35,826
Cluses 16,918
Sallanches 16,831
Saint-Julien-en-Genevois 15,873
Rumilly 15,768

Education and research edit

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 (CETIM)
  • Research laboratories related to Polytech Savoie, ESIA and Savoy University
  • Technical center for screw-machining industry (CTDEC) in Cluses
  • The Thésame - mechatronics and management

Economy edit

Agriculture edit

In 2006 approximately 142,000 hectares (350,000 acres) of land was suitable for agriculture, of which 33,600 hectares (83,000 acres) (24 percent) was arable land suitable for market gardening, cultivation or pasture; 600 hectares (1,500 acres) was orchards; 300 hectares (740 acres) was vineyards, and 108,300 hectares (268,000 acres) was alpine tundra or grasses.[11] 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.

 
Reblochon cheese

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.[11]: 8  Cheese production (by variety) in 1999 (except as noted) was:

Crafts edit

In late 2000 crafts occupied 15 percent of the workforce, or 28,443 employees and 1,922 apprentices. The 11,951 companies represented on the Répertoire des Métiers (Trade Index) were divided into:

  • Food: 955 companies
  • Construction: 4,924
  • Production: 2,834
  • Services: 3,238

Construction and public works edit

In late December 2000, building construction and public works included 13,867 employees in 4,838 companies as follows:

  • Construction: 20 percent
  • Decoration, electricity, plastering, painting: 70 percent
  • Public works: 10 percent

Trade edit

In late December 2000, the trade sector accounted for 33,994 employees in 9,351 companies as follows:

  • 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 edit

In late 2006, the département had 600 commercial establishments in over 300 square metres (3,200 sq ft) (for a total area of 705,419 square metres (7,593,070 sq ft)), including:

  • 13 hypermarkets (78,105 square metres (840,720 sq ft))
  • 92 supermarkets (112,844 square metres (1,214,640 sq ft))
  • 24 maxidiscounts (17,600 square metres (189,000 sq ft))
  • 6 department and variety stores (14,640 square metres (157,600 sq ft))
  • 465 other stores (482,230 square metres (5,190,700 sq ft))

From 1998 to 2005, 65 new supermarkets were built for an area totaling 50,000 square metres (540,000 sq ft). 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 (Swiss shoppers make up half the shoppers in the Genève–Savoyard district). At the end of 2006, traditional small businesses (less than 300 square metres (3,200 sq ft)) represented 84 percent of businesses and 40 percent of retail space.

Companies edit

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 (hotels, restaurants, recreational, cultural, sports, personal and household services). This accounted for 21.6 percent of new businesses. The most active sectors were real estate (up 24 percent), construction (up 15.4 percent), business services (up 12.4 percent) and the food industry (up 10 percent).

In 1999, Haute-Savoie had 2,779 industrial companies producing 13.60 percent of all business income.

Companies in Haute-Savoie edit

  • Food: Entremont, Evian (mineral water), Cereal Partners France, La Gerbe Savoyarde, France, Decoration, Besnier, Fruity
  • Chemistry-Pharmacy-Medical: Labcatal, Nicholas Roche, Pierre Fabre Galderma, Ivoclar, 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 (Group Textron)
  • 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 (Bodycote), 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 (skiing), Mavic, Dynastar, Millet, Fusalp, Eider
  • Other: Velsol France, Mecalac, ABMT (Bodycote)

Screw-cutting is a precision parts-machining industry, and Haute-Savoie generates the bulk of French screws. Firms engaged in screw-cutting are major employers in the department. While the automotive industry is the principal client, firms also service the electronics, household-appliance and medical sectors.[12]

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 (primarily small), 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 (Centre Technique du Decolletage). 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 (4P project), 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 (cars, trucks, rail and air), production and distribution of electricity, hydraulics (gas or liquid, high-pressure vacuum), medical and health-related.

Services edit

In late December 2000, the service sector employed 75,768 people in 11,129 companies in:

  • 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 edit

As of late December 2000, the tourism sector had a total of 635,000 beds divided as follows:

  • 1,250 – Rural lodgings
  • 803 – Hotels
  • 453 – Guest rooms
  • 191 – Campsites
  • 70 – Bed-and-breakfasts
  • 40 – Mountain huts

In 1999 there were 37.9 million overnight stays: 56 percent in winter and 44 percent during the rest of the year.

Cross-border workers edit

Many people who live in Haute-Savoie (more than 52,200 in November 2006) work in Switzerland (in the cantons of Geneva, Vaud and Valais).[citation needed] The phenomenon has accelerated since bilateral agreements concluded between Switzerland and the European Union,[when?] of which a significant part concerned free movement of people. In 2007, commuting increased over 12%.

Effective June 1, 2007, residents of Haute-Savoie may freely work in Switzerland. The department and municipalities receive compensation ("frontier funds") 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 edit

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 edit

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 (compared with the national average of €21,930).

Transport edit

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 (high speed trains) departures and arrivals to and from Paris via the high-speed line from Lyon Part-Dieu.

Sources edit

  • Assedic (January 2000)
  • Construction 74 (January 2000)
  • ERC / DDAF 1999
  • Chamber of Agriculture
  • Chamber of Trade (December 2000)
  • Customs
  • SIRENE of INSEE (July 2003)
  • CTDEC
  • Chamber of Commerce
  • Thésame

See also edit

Language edit

Places edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Arpitan: Savouè d'Amont or Hiôta-Savouè; 'Upper Savoy'; German: Obersavoyen or Hochsavoyen; Italian: Alta Savoia.

References edit

  1. ^ "Répertoire national des élus: les conseillers départementaux". data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises (in French). 4 May 2022.
  2. ^ "Téléchargement du fichier d'ensemble des populations légales en 2021". The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies. 28 December 2023.
  3. ^ a b Populations légales 2019: 74 Haute-Savoie, INSEE
  4. ^ Nationale, Assemblée. "Assemblée nationale ~ Les députés, le vote de la loi, le Parlement français". Assemblée nationale.
  5. ^ Département de la Haute-Savoie (74), INSEE, retrieved 11 July 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d "Haute-Savoie: IIIe inventaire 1998" (PDF). Inventaire forestier départemental. Inventaire Forestier National. 2005. Retrieved 2010-09-03.
  7. ^ . Réserves naturelles de France. Archived from the original on August 24, 2003. Retrieved 2010-09-03.
  8. ^ . Les réserves naturelles de France - les réserves - par region. Réserves naturelles de France. Archived from the original on May 4, 2009. Retrieved 2010-09-03.
  9. ^ "Historique de la Haute-Savoie". Le SPLAF.
  10. ^ "Évolution et structure de la population en 2016". INSEE.
  11. ^ a b . Direction Départementale de l’Agriculture et de la Forêt. April 2008. Archived from the original (pdf) on 2011-07-20. Retrieved 2010-09-03.
  12. ^ . Chambre de Commerce et d'Industrie de la Haute-Savoie. 2009. Archived from the original on 9 August 2011. Retrieved 6 August 2011. Industry at the heart of dynamism in Haute-Savoie. 30% of GDP in Haute-Savoie comes from industry (compared with 20% in France) A concentration of several professions/skills on one region: screw-cutting, pre-cutting, assembly of sub-assemblies, innovative materials, surface treatment, grinding, tool manufacture. Three key activities: - Sub-contracting and manufacture of sub-assemblies - Capital goods (specialist machinery, robotics) - Consumer goods: agri-food, sports and leisure, household equipment Some 2,500 production organisations 52,000 industrial employees (of which 26,000 in metallurgy and metal-working) Industrial fabric made up primarily of SMEs (79.2% of businesses with fewer than 10 employees). The Arve valley: the global benchmark for screw-cutting The capital of screw-cutting, Haute-Savoie represents 65% of screw-cutting in France, and 20% of industrial enterprises within the administrative area + 800 sub-contracting SMEs and almost 500 SMEs specialising in screw-cutting More than 8,000 employees work in screw-cutting in the Arve valley. Main client screw-cutting client sectors in decreasing order of size: automotive (60% of screw-cutting organisations work for this sector), electronics, household appliances, medical.

External links edit

  •   Haute-Savoie travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • (in French) Departmental Council website
  • (in French) Prefecture website
  • (in French) Haute-Savoie Chamber of Commerce and Industry
  • Employment statistics[permanent dead link] access to regional statistics (Department of Labor Region Rhone-Alpes)
  • Coolidge, William Augustus Brevoort (1911). "Haute-Savoie" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). p. 74.

haute, savoie, pronounced, savwa, department, auvergne, rhône, alpes, region, southeastern, france, bordering, both, switzerland, italy, prefecture, annecy, north, lake, geneva, south, southeast, mont, blanc, aravis, mountain, range, savouè, amont, arpitan, de. Haute Savoie pronounced ot savwa a is a department in the Auvergne Rhone 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 range Haute Savoie Savoue d Amont Arpitan DepartmentFrom top down left to right Aiguille du Midi Lac Vert in Passy prefecture building in Annecy a view of Les Houches Thonon les Bains landscape near ChamonixCoat of armsLogoLocation of Haute Savoie in FranceCoordinates 46 00 N 06 20 E 46 000 N 6 333 E 46 000 6 333CountryFranceRegionAuvergne Rhone AlpesPrefectureAnnecySubprefecturesBonnevilleSaint Julien en GenevoisThonon les BainsGovernment President of the Departmental CouncilMartial Saddier 1 Area1 Total4 388 km2 1 694 sq mi Elevation21 160 m 3 810 ft Highest elevation4 810 40 m 15 782 15 ft Lowest elevation250 m 820 ft Population 2021 2 Total841 482 Rank27th Density190 km2 500 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST ISO 3166 codeFR 74Department number74Arrondissements4Cantons17Communes279 1 French Land Register data which exclude estuaries and lakes ponds and glaciers larger than 1 km2 2 Inventaire forestier departemental IIIe inventaire 1998 It holds its name from the Savoy historical region as does the department of Savoie located south of Haute Savoie In 2019 it had a population of 826 094 3 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 Contents 1 History 2 Politics 2 1 Departmental Council of Haute Savoie 2 2 Representation in Paris 2 2 1 National Assembly 2 2 2 Senate 3 Geography 3 1 Forests 3 2 Lakes 4 Demographics 4 1 Principal towns 4 2 Education and research 5 Economy 5 1 Agriculture 5 2 Crafts 5 3 Construction and public works 5 4 Trade 5 5 Retail 5 6 Companies 5 6 1 Companies in Haute Savoie 5 7 Services 5 8 Tourism 5 9 Cross border workers 5 10 Export 5 11 Taxation 5 12 Transport 5 13 Sources 6 See also 6 1 Language 6 2 Places 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory editSee also Savoy The historical region of Savoy was governed by the House of Savoy the ruling dynasty of Savoy from 1032 to 1860 The Duchy of Savoy were rulers of the Savoy region from 1416 to 1720 The territory occupied by modern Haute Savoie and the adjoining department of Savoie became part of the Kingdom of Sardinia after the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713 Annexation of the region by France was formalised in the Treaty of Turin on March 24 1860 From November 1942 to September 1943 Haute Savoie was subjected to military occupation by Fascist Italy The Maquis des Glieres a band of Free French Resistance fighters who opposed the Nazi Vichy and Milice regimes during World War II operated from Haute Savoie In the winter of 1943 1944 German troops burned down around 500 farms in response to French Resistance activities Politics editDepartmental Council of Haute Savoie edit Main article Departmental Council of Haute Savoie See also 2021 French departmental elections The Departmental Council of Haute Savoie has 34 seats As of 2020 fifteen councillors are part of the Haute Savoie Union group miscellaneous right fourteen are part of the Avenir Haute Savoie group The Republicans and five are part of the Union du Centre group The Centrists Martial Saddier had been President of the Departmental Council since 2021 Representation in Paris edit National Assembly edit Haute Savoie elected the following members of the National Assembly in the 2022 legislative election Constituency Member 4 Party Haute Savoie s 1st constituency Veronique Riotton Ensemble Haute Savoie s 2nd constituency Antoine Armand Ensemble Haute Savoie s 3rd constituency Christelle Petex Levet UDC Haute Savoie s 4th constituency Virginie Duby Muller UDC Haute Savoie s 5th constituency Anne Cecile Violland Ensemble Haute Savoie s 6th constituency Xavier Roseren Ensemble Senate edit See also List of senators of Haute Savoie Haute Savoie sends three Senators to Parliament Loic Herve and Cyril Pellevat were both elected in 2014 Sylviane Noel took office in 2018 Geography edit nbsp Haute Savoie highlighted in brown in the former Rhone Alpes region with arrondissements outlined Haute Savoie comprises four arrondissements divided into 279 communes and 17 cantons 5 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 250 metres 820 ft in the Rhone Valley and the highest Mont Blanc at 4 810 40 metres 15 782 2 ft 6 9 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 known collectively as L Avant pays savoyard 6 9 Its mountainous terrain makes mountain passes important to trade and economic life Some of the most important are the Col de la Forclaz which connects Chamonix to the canton of Valais and the Mont Blanc Tunnel linking Chamonix to Courmayeur in the Aosta Valley 6 10 Forests edit As of 1996 178 624 hectares 441 390 acres of Haute Savoie is forested 38 8 percent of the total land area compared to 34 4 percent for the Rhone Alpes region and 27 1 percent for France as a whole Of the forested area 141 063 hectares 348 570 acres 79 percent is managed for timber and other forest products with the remaining 37 561 hectares 92 820 acres having no commercial value or used for outdoor recreation 6 12 nbsp Map of Haute Savoie 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 7 Of the 37 561 hectares 92 820 acres of land not managed for timber Haute Savoie has nine national nature reserves totaling 24 542 hectares 60 640 acres 8 Aiguilles Rouges National Nature Reserve 3 276 hectares 8 100 acres Bout du Lac d Annecy National Nature Reserve 84 hectares 210 acres Carlaveyron National Nature Reserve 599 hectares 1 480 acres Contamines Montjoie National Nature Reserve 5 500 hectares 14 000 acres Delta de la Dranse National Nature Reserve 539 7 hectares 1 334 acres Passy National Nature Reserve 2 000 hectares 4 900 acres Roc de Chere National Nature Reserve 68 24 hectares 168 6 acres Sixt Passy National Nature Reserve 9 200 hectares 23 000 acres Vallon de Berard National Nature Reserve 3 276 hectares 8 100 acres Lakes edit See also Lakes in Haute Savoie nbsp Aerial view of Lake Annecy from the southeast Haute Savoie has significant freshwater resources Lake Annecy is a major attraction along with the town of Evian les Bains perhaps the best known town on the French shore of Lake Geneva and known worldwide for its Evian mineral water Haute Savoie is entirely within the watershed of the Rhone Demographics editPopulation development since 1861 Historical populationYearPop p a 1861267 496 1872273 027 0 19 1881274 087 0 04 1891268 471 0 21 1901263 803 0 18 1911255 137 0 33 1921235 668 0 79 1931252 794 0 70 1936259 961 0 56 1946270 565 0 40 YearPop p a 1954293 852 1 04 1962329 230 1 43 1968378 550 2 35 1975447 795 2 43 1982494 505 1 43 1990568 286 1 75 1999631 679 1 18 2006696 254 1 40 2011746 994 1 42 2016801 416 1 42 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org source 9 10 Principal towns edit The most populous commune is Annecy the prefecture As of 2019 there are 7 communes with more than 15 000 inhabitants 3 Commune Population 2019 Annecy 130 721 Annemasse 36 582 Thonon les Bains 35 826 Cluses 16 918 Sallanches 16 831 Saint Julien en Genevois 15 873 Rumilly 15 768 Education and research edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it April 2021 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 CETIM Research laboratories related to Polytech Savoie ESIA and Savoy University Technical center for screw machining industry CTDEC in Cluses The Thesame mechatronics and managementEconomy editThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information July 2022 Agriculture edit See also Abondance cattle and Savoy wine In 2006 approximately 142 000 hectares 350 000 acres of land was suitable for agriculture of which 33 600 hectares 83 000 acres 24 percent was arable land suitable for market gardening cultivation or pasture 600 hectares 1 500 acres was orchards 300 hectares 740 acres was vineyards and 108 300 hectares 268 000 acres was alpine tundra or grasses 11 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 nbsp Reblochon cheese 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 11 8 Cheese production by variety in 1999 except as noted was Reblochon 16 950 tons Tomme de Savoie 5 500 tons Emmental 3 000 tons 2006 4 050 tons in 1999 Raclette raw milk 2 000 tons Abondance 700 tons Tome des Bauges 650 tons Crafts edit In late 2000 crafts occupied 15 percent of the workforce or 28 443 employees and 1 922 apprentices The 11 951 companies represented on the Repertoire des Metiers Trade Index were divided into Food 955 companies Construction 4 924 Production 2 834 Services 3 238 Construction and public works edit In late December 2000 building construction and public works included 13 867 employees in 4 838 companies as follows Construction 20 percent Decoration electricity plastering painting 70 percent Public works 10 percent Trade edit In late December 2000 the trade sector accounted for 33 994 employees in 9 351 companies as follows 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 edit In late 2006 the departement had 600 commercial establishments in over 300 square metres 3 200 sq ft for a total area of 705 419 square metres 7 593 070 sq ft including 13 hypermarkets 78 105 square metres 840 720 sq ft 92 supermarkets 112 844 square metres 1 214 640 sq ft 24 maxidiscounts 17 600 square metres 189 000 sq ft 6 department and variety stores 14 640 square metres 157 600 sq ft 465 other stores 482 230 square metres 5 190 700 sq ft From 1998 to 2005 65 new supermarkets were built for an area totaling 50 000 square metres 540 000 sq ft 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 Swiss shoppers make up half the shoppers in the Geneve Savoyard district At the end of 2006 traditional small businesses less than 300 square metres 3 200 sq ft represented 84 percent of businesses and 40 percent of retail space Companies edit 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 hotels restaurants recreational cultural sports personal and household services This accounted for 21 6 percent of new businesses The most active sectors were real estate up 24 percent construction up 15 4 percent business services up 12 4 percent and the food industry up 10 percent In 1999 Haute Savoie had 2 779 industrial companies producing 13 60 percent of all business income Companies in Haute Savoie edit Food Entremont Evian mineral water Cereal Partners France La Gerbe Savoyarde France Decoration Besnier Fruity Chemistry Pharmacy Medical Labcatal Nicholas Roche Pierre Fabre Galderma Ivoclar 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 Group Textron 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 Staubli Prosys Mach 1 Techmeta Bodycote 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 skiing Mavic Dynastar Millet Fusalp Eider Other Velsol France Mecalac ABMT Bodycote Screw cutting is a precision parts machining industry and Haute Savoie generates the bulk of French screws Firms engaged in screw cutting are major employers in the department While the automotive industry is the principal client firms also service the electronics household appliance and medical sectors 12 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 primarily small 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 Centre Technique du Decolletage 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 4P project 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 cars trucks rail and air production and distribution of electricity hydraulics gas or liquid high pressure vacuum medical and health related Services edit In late December 2000 the service sector employed 75 768 people in 11 129 companies in 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 edit As of late December 2000 the tourism sector had a total of 635 000 beds divided as follows 1 250 Rural lodgings 803 Hotels 453 Guest rooms 191 Campsites 70 Bed and breakfasts 40 Mountain huts In 1999 there were 37 9 million overnight stays 56 percent in winter and 44 percent during the rest of the year nbsp Yvoire and the Lake Leman nbsp Arve Valley and the town of Cluses nbsp Chateau de Ruphy in Duingt nbsp Seyssel nbsp Montriond Lake nbsp Aiguille du Midi Cross border workers edit Many people who live in Haute Savoie more than 52 200 in November 2006 work in Switzerland in the cantons of Geneva Vaud and Valais citation needed The phenomenon has accelerated since bilateral agreements concluded between Switzerland and the European Union when of which a significant part concerned free movement of people In 2007 commuting increased over 12 Effective June 1 2007 residents of Haute Savoie may freely work in Switzerland The department and municipalities receive compensation frontier funds 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 edit 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 edit 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 compared with the national average of 21 930 Transport edit 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 high speed trains departures and arrivals to and from Paris via the high speed line from Lyon Part Dieu Sources edit Assedic January 2000 Construction 74 January 2000 ERC DDAF 1999 Chamber of Agriculture Chamber of Trade December 2000 Customs SIRENE of INSEE July 2003 CTDEC Chamber of Commerce ThesameSee also editLanguage edit Arpitan language Places edit Lake Annecy The third largest lake in France Lake Geneva Lake which joins Upper Savoy and Switzerland Notes edit Arpitan Savoue d Amont or Hiota Savoue Upper Savoy German Obersavoyen or Hochsavoyen Italian Alta Savoia References edit Repertoire national des elus les conseillers departementaux data gouv fr Plateforme ouverte des donnees publiques francaises in French 4 May 2022 Telechargement du fichier d ensemble des populations legales en 2021 The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies 28 December 2023 a b Populations legales 2019 74 Haute Savoie INSEE Nationale Assemblee Assemblee nationale Les deputes le vote de la loi le Parlement francais Assemblee nationale Departement de la Haute Savoie 74 INSEE retrieved 11 July 2022 a b c d Haute Savoie IIIe inventaire 1998 PDF Inventaire forestier departemental Inventaire Forestier National 2005 Retrieved 2010 09 03 What is a nature reserve Reserves naturelles de France Archived from the original on August 24 2003 Retrieved 2010 09 03 Rhone Alpes Les reserves naturelles de France les reserves par region Reserves naturelles de France Archived from the original on May 4 2009 Retrieved 2010 09 03 Historique de la Haute Savoie Le SPLAF Evolution et structure de la population en 2016 INSEE a b Memento agricole et rural Haute Savoie Direction Departementale de l Agriculture et de la Foret April 2008 Archived from the original pdf on 2011 07 20 Retrieved 2010 09 03 Haute Savoie sub contracting Chambre de Commerce et d Industrie de la Haute Savoie 2009 Archived from the original on 9 August 2011 Retrieved 6 August 2011 Industry at the heart of dynamism in Haute Savoie 30 of GDP in Haute Savoie comes from industry compared with 20 in France A concentration of several professions skills on one region screw cutting pre cutting assembly of sub assemblies innovative materials surface treatment grinding tool manufacture Three key activities Sub contracting and manufacture of sub assemblies Capital goods specialist machinery robotics Consumer goods agri food sports and leisure household equipment Some 2 500 production organisations 52 000 industrial employees of which 26 000 in metallurgy and metal working Industrial fabric made up primarily of SMEs 79 2 of businesses with fewer than 10 employees The Arve valley the global benchmark for screw cutting The capital of screw cutting Haute Savoie represents 65 of screw cutting in France and 20 of industrial enterprises within the administrative area 800 sub contracting SMEs and almost 500 SMEs specialising in screw cutting More than 8 000 employees work in screw cutting in the Arve valley Main client screw cutting client sectors in decreasing order of size automotive 60 of screw cutting organisations work for this sector electronics household appliances medical External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Haute Savoie nbsp Haute Savoie travel guide from Wikivoyage in French Departmental Council website in French Prefecture website in French Haute Savoie Chamber of Commerce and Industry Employment statistics permanent dead link access to regional statistics Department of Labor Region Rhone Alpes Coolidge William Augustus Brevoort 1911 Haute Savoie Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed p 74 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haute Savoie amp oldid 1200393744, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.