Report · Climate & Energy · January 2026
Clean energy, a strong Netherlands
Our planet is changing faster than ever. Resources are being depleted, the climate is shifting and our cities are breathing harder. The Netherlands is therefore choosing a calm, considered development path: less emissions, more renewable sources and stronger protection of the landscape. This briefing explains what the transition looks like and why your attention matters.
Global warming and its quiet consequences
The average temperature on Earth has risen by more than 1.2 degrees since the start of the industrial age. For the Netherlands this means wetter winters, drier summers and a higher sea level along the North Sea coast. The Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute warns that extreme rainfall now occurs more often than a decade ago. The effects are not abstract: farmers in Friesland see their soil grow saline, while municipalities in Brabant build larger water buffers and green corridors to soften heat waves. Protecting natural ecosystems — from the Wadden Sea to the Veluwe — has become a national responsibility, not a private hobby.

The Netherlands' role in the green transition
Through the National Climate Agreement the Netherlands has committed to reducing greenhouse gases by 55 per cent by 2030 compared to 1990, and to becoming climate neutral by 2050. To meet these goals offshore wind farms in the North Sea are being expanded, public buildings are fitted with rooftop solar panels and green hydrogen corridors are being developed in Rotterdam and Groningen. According to figures from Statistics Netherlands, renewable energy already supplied more than a third of total electricity consumption in the first quarter of 2026. Dutch energy companies are working with universities and municipalities on storage technology, smart grids and heat pumps — not for quick wins, but to build sustainable development that lasts for generations.

The future of Dutch agriculture
Dutch farmers taught the world to grow food in greenhouses — and they are doing it again, only cleaner. Under the banner of Agriculture 5.0, farms combine sensors, rainwater harvesting and circular fertilisers to produce more food with fewer resources. Vertical growing in the Westland region and high-tech greenhouses in Drenthe use up to 90 per cent less water than open-field farming did twenty years ago. At the same time the government is rolling out nature-inclusive farming, which actively protects meadow birds, bees and soil life. The message is simple: the future of our food begins with the protection of our soil.
The question is no longer whether the Netherlands will change, but how calmly and honestly we guide that change. This newsletter follows the facts, not the hype.
