Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Henk Kamp, VVD, Economic Affairs (Source: Wikimedia/Helene C Stikkel)
- Credit: Henk Kamp, VVD, Economic Affairs (Source: Wikimedia/Helene C Stikkel)
Business
Nature
Innovation
Cabinet
gas extraction
geothermal heating
Henk Kamp
leftover heat
Ministry of Economic Affairs
natural gas
renewable heat
Thursday, 2 April 2015 - 08:59

Share this article:

End reliance on natural gas: Dutch gov't invests in geothermal technology

In the coming years the Cabinet is going to invest in ensuring that Dutch homes and business are less reliant on natural gas for heating, instead heating properties with renewable heat or leftover heat. This is according to a letter that Minister Henk Kamp of Economic Affairs wrote to the Tweede Kamer, lower house of parliament, on Tuesday. Nearly 60 percent of all the energy consumed in the Netherlands, is used in the generation of heat. Currently natural gas is used for this in almost all of the Netherlands. According to Minister Kamp, a lot of the generated heat is still lost and can be used more efficiently, for example by using leftover heat from the industry to heat households and businesses. "This saves energy and causes up to 75 percent less CO2 emissions compared to a household with a central heating system." Kamp said. Dutch company Nerdalize has come up with an innovative way to use leftover heat by placing computer servers in households instead of in conventional data centers, and using the heat generated by the servers to warm up the house. "This is a good time to modernize the heat supply and to make it more sustainable, as the gas network in many cities is in need of renovation or replacement. We are also preparing for a reduction in gas production and using Dutch gas differently in the future." Kamp said. The government is currently working on reforming the laws and regulations for heat supply. They are working on a new market model in which sustainable heat will resemble the markets for electricity and gas. In the coming time, the government will also invest more in the development of heat projects. The Cabinet recently made 3.6 million euros available for exploratory drilling to extract heat from the deep earth in Westland. The residents of Groningen at least will be very happy if the country could be less reliant on natural gas. The province has been suffering with increasingly powerful earthquakes caused by gas extraction in the last few years. A study by Shell and NAM, the frequency and severity of the earthquakes in the province will only increase as the gas fields grow empty.

More like this

Image
Onshore gas drilling rig
Friesland wants one-third of revenue from onshore gas extraction, offered only 5 percent
Image
Gas extraction
Government reaches deal with NAM to end gas extraction plans in Friesland
Image
The Council of State in The Hague
Council of State rules that gas extraction company NAM can resume operations in Warffum
Image
Liquid Natural Gas storage tanks and tanker at dusk, Port of Rotterdam.
Natural gas use fell by 5 percent in the Netherlands last year

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • ICC prosecutor says Dutch gov't did nothing when Israel intimidated her in The Hague
  • Strikes are coming: Trade unions after meeting with gov't on social assistance cuts
  • One of Europe’s longest walking paths has 500-km wheelchair friendly route
  • Royal Collections probe finds dozens of colonial-era objects likely acquired unlawfully
  • Video: Police arrest nearly naked man after The Hague City Hall, Library evacuation

Top stories

  • Strikes are coming: Trade unions after meeting with gov't on social assistance cuts
  • Video: Police arrest nearly naked man after The Hague City Hall, Library evacuation
  • Video: Teen dies after rescue from Dordrecht swimming lake in third drowning this week
  • Two Deputy PMs in last Dutch gov’t wanted headscarves declared as hindering emancipation
  • Economic growth in all Dutch provinces last year; Unemployment up in most of them

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

Footer menu

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