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Dutch Association of Sustainable Energy
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Tuesday, 4 November 2025 - 06:30

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Bureaucracy slows sustainability upgrades for hundreds of thousands of Dutch homes

The sustainability upgrades of hundreds of thousands of Dutch homes are at risk because homeowners’ associations (VVEs) cannot easily modify their buildings due to complex rules and bureaucratic hurdles, according to an undisclosed report obtained by De Telegraaf. Officials cited by the newspaper warn the delays caused by official procedures slowing progress could put national climate goals in immediate danger.

The study, conducted by consulting firm Berenschot for the Ministry of Housing, found that more than 70 percent of all VVEs must amend their deeds dividing the property. The legal document defines which parts of a building are privately owned and which are shared. Changes to the deed are often required to connect homes to district heating systems or to install solar panels, frequently tangling up progress.

“These obstacles mean that a significant portion of necessary changes will be delayed or may not be realized at all,” the researchers wrote, highlighting the impact on both energy transition and housing development. The report warns that bureaucratic hurdles could prevent homes from connecting to district heating, forcing them to continue relying on natural gas.

By 2030, municipalities are expected to make 1.5 million homes and other buildings natural gas-free or ready for conversion. The Dutch government has set goals to eliminate natural gas usage nationwide by 2050, which includes improving insulation and connecting buildings to sustainable heating sources.

The Climate Agreement calls for an additional 500,000 existing homes and buildings to be connected to district heating by 2030. The government aims to expand these networks more quickly, especially in neighborhoods where it is most cost-effective, and to ensure the systems are reliable, sustainable, and affordable.

Berenschot’s researchers recommended clarifying the law so sustainability upgrades can proceed with 80 percent approval, balancing property rights against the public interest.

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