Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Planes at Schiphol Airport
Planes at Schiphol Airport - Credit: portosabbia / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Politics
Tech
Nature
Innovation
WKR
Scientific Climate Council
Climate change
global warming
climate neutral
CO2
greenhouse gas emissions
CO2 capture
CO2 removal
co2 certificates
Heleen de Coninck
Wednesday, 10 July 2024 - 08:00

Share this article:

Netherlands must focus on CO2 removal, and not just with trees: Advisory Council

To achieve the climate goals, the Netherlands quickly needs a new industry that removes CO2 from the atmosphere. And it has to do more than plant more trees. The Scientific Climate Council (WKR) has issued this advice to the Cabinet. “We have to start now; otherwise the technology will not be ready in time to play the role that is desperately needed in 2035,” said WKR chairman Heleen de Coninck.

To encourage companies to get started on CO2 removal, the WKR proposed a government purchasing program. “You can’t get this off the ground without active government intervention,” said De Coninck. This purchase costs money, but the experts point out that certificates for CO2 removal are also worth money. The government may later be able to sell some of it to companies that retain unavoidable emissions.

According to the council, CO2 removal is indispensable to reducing greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by 2050. However, sectors such as aviation and agriculture cannot yet be made completely emission-free. Any remaining emissions must be compensated for in some other way. Moreover, according to the experts, measures are needed to keep the temperature increase below 1.5 degrees or to reduce it again.

Planting forests is a well-known short-term solution. However, forests can burn down, releasing CO2 back into the atmosphere. The WKR recommends focusing primarily on measures that permanently remove CO2 from the atmosphere.

A well-developed but controversial method is using biomass for energy production in combination with the capture and storage of CO2. The challenge remains: where do you get enough biomass without cutting down massive forests? Removing CO2 directly from the air with special installations is also an option, although this is relatively expensive and requires a lot of energy.

A third technique is mineralization: rocks like basalt and olivine can absorb CO2 during weathering. That process “can be significantly accelerated by grinding the rocks and spreading them, for example, on land or in water,” the council said. CO2 can also mineralize when producing cement. In this way, the greenhouse gas is converted into building material.

The WKR added that CO2 removal must not become an excuse to be less hasty in reducing emissions.

Reporting by ANP

More like this

Image
A Shell fuel tanker truck
New lawsuit against Shell as oil and gas giant takes step to increase fossil fuel mining
Image
Eemshaven power plant RWE
Dutch emissions increased in 2025; Climate goals further out of reach
Image
Amsterdammers enjoying a hot summer day in the Oosterpark, 11 August 2025
Netherlands' 10 hottest years all in this century; 2025 was exceptionally sunny, dry
Image
A Shell fuel tanker truck
Milieudefensie asks Supreme Court to order Shell to do more against climate change
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • PRO, VVD, D66, Volt, and CDA strike deal to govern Rotterdam
  • Drug activity overruns Den Helder neighborhood, dealers take over at-risk locals’ homes
  • Heat wave: Code Orange weather alert for 36°C temps takes effect on Wednesday
  • Dutch businesses shift focus from recruitment to retaining and developing staff
  • Amsterdam broadens reporting points for anti-LGBTQIA+ violence during world pride

Top stories

  • Heat wave: Code Orange weather alert for 36°C temps takes effect on Wednesday
  • More international students facing housing issues in Netherlands, from bedbugs to fraud
  • Woman, 42, drowns in Waal after rescuing children from water
  • Average Netherlands home price rose by 4.4% to €487,383 in May
  • Video: Explosion damages Amsterdam-Oost apartment building; Two teens on fatbike sought

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content