Experts push plan to end Dutch housing deadlock, call for looser nitrogen limits
A group of experts and academics has presented a housing construction plan aimed at breaking the current deadlock in Dutch housing policy, calling for sweeping regulatory changes and warning that the present rules have stalled progress, De Telegraaf reports.
The proposal, unveiled Friday, targets what the authors describe as entrenched obstacles in existing laws and regulations. They say these rules have created “too many barriers,” leading to “irresponsible decisions” that have failed to lift housing construction out of stagnation.
The experts argue that the first step should be to raise the nitrogen emission threshold, which they say would allow stalled building projects to restart.
They also call for a single, more effective permitting system that applies uniformly across municipalities. According to the plan, the current system varies widely between local governments, slowing construction.
Implementing these measures, the experts warn, will require substantial funding. They expect the public will again bear much of the cost, noting that “there are already so many problems urgently needing solutions.”
One reader, M. van den Berg, echoed this concern to De Telegraaf in reaction to the plan, saying that existing laws and regulations must be adjusted to resolve the housing crisis.
The authors say the coming months will be crucial. They hope a strong new government will soon be formed to steer the country out of what they describe as a “political labyrinth” and address what some have labeled the current “construction catastrophe.”
