A green horizon: how the Netherlands is shaping the energy transition
The world is changing. Resources are being depleted, water tables are falling and the climate is responding faster than predicted. The Netherlands — a country that has lived with water for centuries — is once again choosing adaptation. This time through a deep redesign of its energy system and its agriculture. This dossier summarises the state of play for 2026 and looks ahead to the targets set for 2030.
Global warming: what the figures actually tell us
The average temperature in De Bilt during 2025 was approximately 2.3 °C above the pre-industrial reference. That is faster than the global average, because temperate land surfaces warm more rapidly than the oceans. For the Netherlands this translates into wetter winters, drier summers and increased pressure on dykes, drinking-water sources and urban green structures. The protection of low-lying regions calls for decisions today whose effects will only be visible by 2040 or 2050. Awareness is growing that climate adaptation is not a stand-alone subject; it is becoming inseparable from housing, mobility and food production.
The role of the Netherlands in the European energy transition
Dutch energy companies and grid operators are coordinating an effort of historic scale. The second generation of wind farms is rising on the North Sea, with turbines that each deliver more power than a medium-sized Dutch town consumes. On land, unused rooftops are being mapped systematically, from logistics halls along the A2 motorway to schools in Friesland. The development is not without obstacles: grid congestion delays new connections, permitting paths are long and neighbourhoods differ greatly in support. Even so, several independent studies indicate that the pace is sufficient to keep the 2030 milestones within reach, provided the high-voltage grid continues to expand.
The future of agriculture: quiet, precise, circular
On the sandy soils of Brabant and in the polders of Flevoland, an agriculture is emerging that resembles careful gardening more than large-scale production. Sensors measure moisture and nitrogen by the square metre, drones map plant health and autonomous machines work at night to limit soil compaction. This 'Agriculture 5.0' aims not only at yield, but equally at recovery — of soil life, of the water balance and of the landscape itself. Dutch educational institutions guide hundreds of farms through this transition. The aim is clear: maintain food production while emissions decline and nature regains room.
Protection of nature and the next generation
What we build today, we protect for the children who will walk tomorrow's streets. Dutch policy explicitly values a fair transition: lower-income households are given priority in insulation programmes, and small collectives can receive support for shared solar installations. The development of green infrastructure goes hand in hand with the protection of meadow birds, peat-meadow areas and coastal dunes. A strong Netherlands, in this vision, is one that shares its prosperity with the living environment that makes it possible.
This dossier is updated each month based on publications from PBL, Statistics Netherlands and the European Commission. Read further through our articles or sign up for the weekly summary.