Energy balance sheet; supply and consumption, sector

Energy balance sheet; supply and consumption, sector

Energy commodities Sectors Periods From consumption Total energy consumption (PJ) From consumption Own use (PJ) From consumption Distribution losses (PJ) From consumption Final energy consumption (PJ) From consumption Non-energy use (PJ)
Total energy commodities 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** 25.0 0.0 24.9
Total energy commodities 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** 7.9 7.9
Total coal and coal products 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** 1.1 1.1
Total coal and coal products 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** 0.0 0.0
Primary coals 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** 0.1 0.1
Primary coals 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** 0.0 0.0
Total coal products 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** 1.0 1.0
Total coal products 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Coke oven gas 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Coke oven gas 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Blast furnace gas 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Blast furnace gas 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Other coal products 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** 1.0 1.0
Other coal products 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Total crude and petroleum products 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** 0.2 0.2
Total crude and petroleum products 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** 0.0 0.0
Total crude 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Total crude 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Total petroleum products 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** 0.2 0.2
Total petroleum products 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** 0.0 0.0
Residual gas 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Residual gas 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Lpg 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** 0.0 0.0
Lpg 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** 0.0 0.0
Naphtha 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Naphtha 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Gasoline 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Gasoline 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Kerosene 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Kerosene 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Gas and diesel oil 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** 0.2 0.2
Gas and diesel oil 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** 0.0 0.0
Fuel oil 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Fuel oil 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Other petroleum products 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Other petroleum products 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Natural gas 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** 19.4 19.2
Natural gas 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** 7.3 7.3
Renewable energy 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** 0.1
Renewable energy 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** . .
Hydro power 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Hydro power 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Deep geothermal heat 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Deep geothermal heat 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Ambient energy 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Ambient energy 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Total solar energy 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** .
Total solar energy 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** .
Solar thermal 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Solar thermal 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Solar photovoltaic 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** 0.1
Solar photovoltaic 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** 0.0
Wind energy 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Wind energy 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Total biomass 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Total biomass 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** . .
Municipal waste; renewable fraction 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Municipal waste; renewable fraction 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Solid and liquid biomass 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** . .
Solid and liquid biomass 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** . .
Biogas 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** . .
Biogas 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** . .
Electricity 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** 4.2 0.0 4.3
Electricity 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** 0.6 0.6
Heat 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021** 0.1
Heat 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021** 0.0
Total other energy commodities 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Total other energy commodities 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Nuclear energy 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Nuclear energy 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Waste and other energy sources 23 Manufacture of building materials 2021**
Waste and other energy sources 233 Manufacture clay building materials 2021**
Source: CBS.
Explanation of symbols

Dataset is not available.


This table contains figures on the supply and consumption of energy broken down by sector and by energy commodity. The energy supply is equal to the indigenous production of energy plus the receipts minus the deliveries of energy plus the stock changes. Consumption of energy is equal to the sum of own use, distribution losses, final energy consumption, non-energy use and the total net energy transformation. For each sector, the supply of energy is equal to the consumption of energy.

For some energy commodities, the total of the observed domestic deliveries is not exactly equal to the sum of the observed domestic receipts. For these energy commodities, a statistical difference arises that can not be attributed to a sector.

The breakdown into sectors follows mainly the classification as is customary in international energy statistics. This classification is based on functions of various sectors in the energy system and for several break downs on the international Standard Industrial Classification (SIC). There are two main sectors: the energy sector (companies with main activity indigenous production or transformation of energy) and energy consumers (other companies, vehicles and dwellings). In addition to a breakdown by sector, there is also a breakdown by energy commodity, such as coal, various petroleum products, natural gas, renewable energy, electricity and heat.

The definitions used in this table are exactly in line with the definitions in the Energy Balance table; supply, transformation and consumption. That table does not contain a breakdown by sector (excluding final energy consumption), but it does provide information about imports, exports and bunkering and also provides more detail about the energy commodities.

Data available:
From: 1990.

Status of the figures:
Figures up to and including 2020 are definite. Figures for 2021 are revised provisional.

Changes as of December 15th 2022:
Figures for 1990 up to and including 2019 have been revised. The revision mainly concerns the consumption of gas- and diesel oil and energy commodities higher in the classification (total petroleum products, total crude and petroleum produtcs and total energy commodities).
The revision is twofold:
- New data for the consumption of diesel oil in mobile machine have been incorporated. Consequently, the final energy consumption of gas- and diesel oil in construction, services and agriculture increases. The biggest change is in construction (+10 PJ from 1990-2015, decreasing to 1 PJ in 2019. In agriculture the change is about 0.5-1.5 PJ from 2010 onwards and for services the change is between 0 and 3 PJ for the whole period.
- The method for dealing with the statistical difference has been adapted. Earlier from 2013 onwards a difference of about 3 percent was assumed, matching old data (up to and including 2012) on final consumption of diesel for road transport based on the dedicated tax specifically for road that existed until 2012. In the new method the statistical difference is eliminated from 2015 onwards. Final consumption of road transport is calculated as the remainder of total supply to the market of diesel minus deliveries to users other than road transport.
The first and second item affect both final consumption of road transport that decreases consequently about 5 percent from 2015 onwards. Before the adaption of the tax system for gas- and diesel oil in 2013 the statistical difference was positive (more supply than consumption). With the new data for mobile machines total consumption has been increased and the statistical difference has been reduced and is even negative for a few years.


Changes as of 1 March 2022:
Figures for 1990 up to and including 2020 have been revised. The most important change is a different way of presenting own use of electricity of power-generating installations. Previously, this was regarded as electricity and CHP transformation input. From now on, this is seen as own use, as is customary in international energy statistics. As a result, the input and net energy transformation decrease and own use increases, on average about 15 PJ per year. Final consumers also have power generating installations. That's why final consumers now also have own use, previously this was not so. In the previous revision of 2021, the new sector blast furnaces was introduced for the years 2015 up to and including 2020, which describes the transformation of coke oven coke and coking coal into blast furnace gas that takes place in the production of pig iron from iron ore. This activity was previously part of the steel industry. With this revision, the change has been put back to 1990.


When will new figures be published?
Revised provisional figures: June/July of the following year.
Definite figures: December of the second following year.

Description topics

From consumption
Calculated from consumption energy consumption is net energy transformation plus own use plus distribution losses plus final energy consumption plus non-energy use.
Total energy consumption
The amount of energy used by companies, households and transport in the Netherlands. Energy can be used
- for transformation into other energy commodities, this is input minus the energy produced.
- as final consumption.
Own use
The consumption of energy in installations for the production or transformation of energy and the consumption of energy by companies in the energy sector. This only concerns the necessary auxiliary energy, not the energy transformation input itself. The energy sector includes the extraction of crude petroleum and gas, coke-oven plants, blast furnaces, oil refineries and energy companies (sector D of the Standard Business Classification (SBI)). Examples of this own use are the combustion of fuels in oil refinery steam boilers to produce steam that brings the refining process to the desired temperature, the consumption of electricity for pumping natural gas from the ground, the consumption of electricity for transporting hard coal in a coal plant and the consumption of electricity by a waste incinerator for flue gas cleaning.
Distribution losses
Distribution losses of electricity and heat.

For electricity includes losses in energy distribution, transmission and transport.
Final energy consumption
Final consumption of energy. No useful energy commodity remains.

Examples are the combustion of natural gas in boilers, household electricity consumption and the consumption of motor fuels for transport.
Non-energy use
Use of an energy commodity for a product that is not energy. The energy used for the production process remains in the product. E.g. use of oil for the production of plastics, or natural gas for fertilisers.

Natural gas, non-energy use

To cope with differences in demand for natural gas in summer and winter there is a need for storage of natural gas.

An empty gas field could be adapted to be used as underground storage for natural gas (UGS). For this purpose a certain pressure is needed to facilitate quick extraction of stored natural gas.

The natural gas that has been injected in the empty field to raise the pressure is called cushion gas. This cushion gas is not part of natural gas as stocks, because it stays in the storage during the entire life time of the UGS.

The amount of natural gas injected in the field to be used as cushion gas is reflected in the energy balance sheet as part of non-energy use of natural gas.