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Houing construction in Amsterdam's Houthaven neighbourhood with construction tools in the foreground and homes in scaffolding in the back. 31 August 2019
Houing construction in Amsterdam's Houthaven neighbourhood with construction tools in the foreground and homes in scaffolding in the back. 31 August 2019 - Credit: Maarten_Zeehandelaar / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Politics
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housing construction
Interprovincial Consultation
Utrecht
Flevoland
Gelderland
grid congestion
nitrogen
Thursday, 23 October 2025 - 15:20

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Plans for 500,000 homes at risk of delay due to nitrogen and grid constraints

The building of around 500,000 homes could stall in the coming years, primarily because of the nitrogen impasse and an overburdened electricity network. Provinces warn that this jeopardizes plans for where and how many homes should be constructed by 2030. The Interprovincial Consultation (IPO) says that significant national investment and greater effort are required to address what many consider the Netherlands’ most pressing issue.

Under regional housing deals, provinces and municipalities have committed to building nearly one million homes by 2030. In the first three years, roughly 260,000 homes were completed, but last year output dropped to 84,000, falling short of the planned increase toward 100,000.

“The combination of obstacles makes fulfilling the housing deals extremely challenging,” the IPO states. “At least half of the remaining housing target in the Netherlands, around 500,000 homes, will face major delays or could be at risk of not being built.”

Nitrogen remains the main obstacle. Over half of new housing projects are located within five kilometers of nitrogen-sensitive nature reserves, making permits extremely difficult to obtain.

Nearly a third of projects are also hindered by an overloaded electricity grid, with construction sometimes halted because builders cannot guarantee connections. The problem is most acute in Utrecht, Gelderland, and Flevoland, where the IPO warns that without additional grid capacity, a large share of new construction could stall by 2027.

Another factor slowing construction is that in over half of the projects, costs exceed revenues, often due to high land purchase prices. Deficits can quickly range from €10,000 to €35,000 per home, with municipalities frequently covering the gap. “Additional challenges include limited investment capacity among housing corporations and a shortage of staff and expertise in municipalities, including urban planners and project managers,” the IPO notes.

According to the IPO, provinces and municipalities cannot resolve issues like grid congestion and the nitrogen problem on their own. The organization urges the government to provide an additional 3 to 4 billion euros per year for housing construction and to amend relevant legislation.

“Provinces are doing everything possible to ease the housing shortage, but real progress can only be made in partnership with the national government,” says Liesbeth Grijsen, an Overijssel commissioner and IPO board member.

Reporting by ANP

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