Lead article
Green Netherlands 2026: development, future and protection
The climate is changing faster than ever and the natural resources on which our country was built are running thin. In this dossier we look at how the Netherlands is renewing its energy base, how the countryside is changing, and why this story is, above all, a story of protection — for our children, our polders and our rivers.
Global warming and the Dutch landscape
Average temperatures in the Netherlands have risen by roughly 2.3 °C since 1900, almost twice the global average. We feel that difference immediately: drier summers in South Limburg, higher water levels on the IJssel, and coastal provinces that need to be reinforced once more. Researchers at the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute have called 2025 the second-warmest year on record. Protecting the Dutch landscape today no longer only means raising dikes; it means addressing the source of the problem — greenhouse gas emissions. The Paris Climate Agreement and the European Green Deal commit our country to cutting at least 55 percent of its CO₂ emissions compared to 1990 by 2030. That is not an abstract ambition. It is a daily task for municipalities, farmers, engineers and citizens.
The Netherlands' role in renewable energy
The Netherlands holds a unique position. It is a small country with abundant wind, plenty of sun on flat roofs and a strong maritime tradition. More than 1,500 wind turbines now spin in the North Sea, together responsible for nearly 22 percent of total electricity generation. On land, solar energy grows in double digits each year; over two million households have panels on their roofs in 2026. Dutch energy companies are working on green hydrogen in Groningen, heat networks in Rotterdam and smart neighbourhood batteries in Utrecht. Yet the transition is not simple. The electricity grid is congested in many areas, permits take time, and space on land is scarce. The next four years are decisive: they will determine whether the development of clean energy keeps pace with the growth of demand.
The future of farming — Agriculture 5.0
Dutch agriculture is world famous for its productivity, but it has to reinvent itself. Under the banner of Agriculture 5.0, vertical greenhouses, precision irrigation and low-carbon livestock practices are emerging. Soil sensors measure moisture and nitrogen per square metre, drones map crops in detail, and reusable residual streams feed new harvests. The goal is more food with less water, less fertiliser and less emissions. For the farmer this means a new role — not only as a producer, but as a steward of the landscape. For the consumer it means a fairer price for what ends up on the plate. This dossier will follow that development closely and give the floor to researchers, young farmers and local officials.

Protection, development, future — three words that will set the direction for a greener Netherlands in the coming years.