France24 – AFP, 23 January 2018
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A total of 180,000 homes and farms near Groningen have suffered damage in recent years. This photo was taken on a farm in the area in 2013 |
THE HAGUE
(AFP) - The Dutch government has ordered more than 200 of the country's biggest
businesses to stop using gas from the quake-prone northern Groningen region,
Europe's largest gasfield, officials confirmed Tuesday.
Instead,
firms must transition by 2022 to using sustainable sources of energy, or use
gas from elsewhere, Economics Minister Eric Wiebes wrote in a letter to each of
the companies, which came to light late Monday.
"The
government wants to eliminate the consumption of 'low calorific gas' by big
businesses, so that in principle no large industrial organisation is still
using Groningen gas by 2022," he said.
The economics
ministry confirmed to AFP that Wiebes had told parliament that about 200
businesses used some 5.5 billion cubic metres of Groningen gas, and that each
of them would be visited to discuss a way forward.
The letters
came after more than 900 homes were damaged in early January when Groningen
province was hit by a 3.4 magnitude quake -- its largest since 2012.
The new
government of Prime Minister Mark Rutte has pledged to wean the country off
Groningen gas, and this "gradual reduction" is "inevitable,"
added Wiebes.
A further
alternative for businesses was to move towards using higher calorific gas which
is not produced in Groningen and comes mainly from abroad.
NAM, the
energy company responsible for the gas extraction, is half-owned by Shell and ExxonMobil
and has been extracting gas from the massive Groningen field since 1963.
But the
area has been plagued by relatively low magnitude quakes said to result from
huge air pockets left underground because of gas extraction.
"This
government wants during its term to swiftly reduce the demand for Groningen
gas," added Wiebes, saying this "ambition had only been reinforced by
the most recent earthquake".
Meanwhile,
an appeals court in northern Leeuwarden on Tuesday upheld a 2015 decision under
which NAM must compensate property owners for the falling prices of damaged
homes.
A study by
the University of Groningen counted a total of 180,000 damaged houses, with a
collective value of 950 million euros ($1.16 billion), the Dutch news agency
ANP said.
In recent
years, the Netherlands has drastically scaled back Groningen gas production in
stages from 53.9 billion cubic metres in 2013 to 21.6 billion in April 2017.
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