Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Child drinking water
Child drinking water - Credit: ersler / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Nature
drinking water
RIVM
drought
vitens
Dunea
Monday, 3 April 2023 - 08:07

Share this article:

RIVM not certain Netherlands will have enough drinking water in 2030

It is uncertain whether the Netherlands will have enough water to produce drinking water in 2030, the National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM) said in a report commissioned by the Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management, NRC reports.

In the reference year 2020, the drinking water companies extracted 1.3 billion cubic meters of surface- or groundwater, depending on the province. By 2030, the RIVM estimates they’ll need to extract an extra 102 million cubic meters of water. But all ten water companies in the Netherlands are facing a multitude of problems and are already struggling to meet the current requirements.

“For years, drinking water companies had the idea: we arranged it well. Now the system's limits have been reached,” RIVM researcher Robin van Leerdam said to NRC. “We see just enough drinking water capacity nationally, but there are already problems regionally.” Without immediate action by the national government, provinces, water boards, and consumers, drinking water companies won’t manage to extract the extra water needed by 2030, and there will be a shortage, the RIVM warned.

According to the RIVM, there are multiple bottlenecks. A growing population and economy increase the demand for drinking water, while drought has caused water scarcity. The surface water extracted by drinking water companies is increasingly often salinized or polluted, meaning they need to make “increasing efforts” to purify it with “increasingly more advanced methods.” That is expensive and loses water in the process.

Drinking water companies that extract groundwater have a permit to extract more water. But they are running up against nature conservation laws that restrict water extraction to keep water levels high in vulnerable areas or not to harm nature. Water companies are, therefore, looking for new extraction sites. But space is scarce in the Netherlands. The permit process is also slow and must weigh up other, often conflicting interests, the RIVIM said.

Four provinces - Gelderland, Overijssel, Groningen, and the western part of Zuid-Holland - already don’t have enough reserves available to guarantee immediate drinking water at peak times.

The RIVM urged the national government and provinces to take measures. Encourage consumers to use water sparingly, line up options to purchase drinking water abroad, retain water in wet periods instead of draining it, and speed up permit procedure, the RIVM suggested.

The drinking water companies already sounded the alarm about this in September but noticed little urgency among the governments, spokespersons for Vitens and Dunea said to NRC. “There are so many crises in the Netherlands that drinking water is apparently not at the top of the pile,” the Vitens spokesperson said. They feel supported by the RIVM research.

More like this

Image
A glass of water
Leak in aging storage cellar likely caused Amersfoort water contamination this winter
Image
Woman filling a plastic bottle with water from a tap
Thousands left without water in Drachten after main pipeline break; Issue now resolved
Image
Child drinking water
Tap water will be more expensive for many Dutch households next year
Image
Open water faucet
Fecal bacterium found in Goor water, boil-water advisory issued
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Record variable electricity prices forecast for Wednesday evening in Netherlands
  • Netherlands under code orange as record heat intensity levels recorded in Eindhoven
  • Rijkswaterstaat extends nationwide heat measures, postpones A12 roadworks
  • Police: Young fatbike rider suspected of groping 8 women in Dordrecht area
  • Six arrested in electoral fraud investigation; Allegations of forgery, voter coercion

Top stories

  • Six arrested in electoral fraud investigation; Allegations of forgery, voter coercion
  • Hottest night on Dutch records expected tomorrow; Code Orange takes effect at noon
  • 270 children abducted to or from the Netherlands last year; Increase of over 25%
  • Public transport strike from 4 a.m. to 8 a.m.: No trains, buses, trams, metros running
  • Life sentence sought for Dutch-Rwandan man over massacre of 3,000 Tutsi in 1994 genocide

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

Footer menu

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