Fri. Nov 8th, 2024
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Netherlands set to close in 2023 Europe’s biggest gas field, because hundreds of earthquakes have hit the Groningen region since the 1980s, informs Bloomberg. The Dutch government is set to permanently shut down Europe’s largest gas field in less than four months, accelerating a closure timeline that may limit its supply buffer as it heads into next winter.

The Groningen field in the northeastern Netherlands will shut on October 1, people familiar with the matter said, asking not to be identified as the plans are still private. The cabinet will make an official decision later this month, a Dutch government spokesperson said.

The Netherlands previously aimed to close the field at the latest by October of next year depending on the geopolitical situation, but officials have faced political pressure over the repercussions from earthquakes it caused.

The field has been a key source of gas for much of Western Europe, as well as a backbone of Dutch public finances, since production commenced in 1963. But the site has also caused huge local opposition after hundreds of earthquakes since the 1980s damaged thousands of homes.

Of the approximately 327,000 homes in the region, at least 127,000 have reported some damage, according to the Groningen Mining Damage Institute. More than 3,300 buildings have been demolished in the area since 2012 because earthquakes have rendered them unsafe.

The decision for closure isn’t entirely irrevocable, the people said.

If there is another energy crisis or a very cold winter, it would take about two weeks to reopen the wells, they said. That’s enough time for the government to revert its decision, depending on weather forecasts.

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