FundovarioGroen Nederland
2026 edition · Climate review

The sun of the Netherlands lights the future

A report on the 2030 carbon footprint targets and the state of renewable energy across our polders, cities and farmland.

49%

Electricity from renewable sources

2030

Target year for 55% less CO₂

4.8 GW

Installed offshore wind capacity

1.7 M

Rooftops with solar panels

Climate science

Global warming and the Low Countries

Spring flowers in a Dutch nature reserve

Since 1901 the average temperature in the Netherlands has risen by more than 2 °C, almost double the global average. Our position below sea level, combined with the density of rivers and estuaries, makes protecting the landscape a national responsibility. Researchers in Wageningen, Delft and Utrecht publish fresh measurements on rainfall, sea level and biodiversity every season. The message is consistent: the development of clean energy, smart dikes and nature-inclusive agriculture will determine whether we leave our children a liveable delta.

Renewable energy

The role of the Netherlands in the European energy transition

Wind turbines along the Dutch coast
Researcher studying renewable energy

Dutch energy companies and municipalities invest space and expertise into solar parks on former landfill sites, floating arrays on inland waters and offshore wind farms along the North Sea coast. According to figures from Statistics Netherlands, renewable sources now cover almost half of national electricity production. By 2030 the government targets a further halving of emissions compared to 1990. This requires new grids, hydrogen storage and a fair distribution of benefits and burdens between cities and the countryside.

Agriculture 5.0

The future of our agricultural culture

Dutch farmland at sunset

In the Flevopolder, the Achterhoek and Zeeland, farmers experiment with soil sensors, precision irrigation and circular agriculture. The concept of Agriculture 5.0 combines human craftsmanship with open data and sustainable robotics. Cooperatives share harvest data, satellite imagery and weather models in order to put the protection of soil and water first. For consumers this means transparency about what is on their plate; for the planet it means that development and conservation of natural capital go hand in hand.

Three pillars of Green Netherlands

Three pillars of Green Netherlands

Three subjects our editors track every week for readers, policymakers and local initiatives.

Development of clean grids

Doubling high-voltage capacity and rolling out smart neighbourhood batteries for stable districts.

Protection of biodiversity

Restoring peat meadows, herb-rich field edges and wetlands along our rivers.

Future of mobility

Bicycle streets, shared transport and electric inland shipping as the basis for clean cities.

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Contact the editors

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Are you a researcher, municipality or resident with a story about sustainable development? Let us know — our editors reply within five working days.

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