Electricity balance sheet; supply and consumption

Electricity balance sheet; supply and consumption

Periods Gross production (mln kWh) Own consumption for electr. production (mln kWh) Net production Net production, total (mln kWh) Net production Nuclear energy (mln kWh) Net production Hydro power (mln kWh) Net production Solar photovoltaic (mln kWh) Net production Other sources (mln kWh)
2025 February* 12,056 330 11,727 326 15 1,019 52
2025 March* 11,893 326 11,567 361 11 2,465 58
2025 April* 10,329 232 10,097 53 4 3,093 57
2025 May* 10,481 184 10,297 261 2 3,775 58
2025 June* 9,841 173 9,668 340 3 3,744 41
2025 July* 10,940 223 10,716 347 2 3,590 51
2025 August* 11,168 235 10,933 347 1 3,267 58
2025 September* 10,558 240 10,318 340 2 2,192 72
2025 October* 10,915 260 10,655 356 2 1,073 56
2025 November* 12,065 323 11,742 347 4 602 57
2025 December* 12,514 381 12,133 361 4 254 56
2026 January* 14,193 378 13,815 362 4 501 58
Source: CBS.
Explanation of symbols

Table explanation


This table shows the supply of electricity. Consumption of electricity is calculated from the supply variables. The supply of electricity primarily includes production plus imports minus exports. The majority of the electricity produced is supplied to the public electricity grid by, for example, power stations and wind turbines. A smaller part is generated by companies themselves for the benefit of their own business processes. For example, many greenhouse companies generate their own electricity for the lighting of their greenhouses.

The net production is determined as gross production minus the own consumption of electricity. Own consumption is the amount of electricity that a producer or installation consumes during electricity production. The net production is broken down in this table into the following energy sources from which the electricity is produced: nuclear energy, coal, petroleum products, natural gas, biomass, other fuels (non-renewable), hydro power, wind energy, solar photovoltaic and other sources.

Imports and exports are further broken down by country of origin or destination.

The total net consumption of electricity in the Netherlands is calculated as the net production plus imports minus exports and distribution losses.

Data available:
Annual figures are available from 1929 onwards. Monthly figures on total electricity production, import and export are available from 1976.
Full data per month is available from 2015.

Status of the figures:
- All figures up to and including reporting year 2023 are definite.
- Figures for 2024 are revised provisional.
- Figures for 2025 and 2026 are provisional.

Changes as of March 31st 2026:
Figures added for January 2026.

Changes as of March 9th 2026:
Figures added for December 2025.

Changes as of January 30th 2026:
Figures added for November 2025.

Changes as of December 24th 2025:
Figures added for October 2025.

When will new figures be published?
Provisional figures: the second month after the end of the reporting period.
Revised provisional figures: June of the year following the reporting year.
Definite figures: not later than November of the second following year.

Description topics

Gross production
The total amount of electricity generated in the Netherlands. This is without deduction of the own consumption of the installations with which the electricity was produced.
Own consumption for electr. production
The amount of electricity that a producer or installation consumes during electricity production.
Net production
The total amount of electricity generated in the Netherlands minus the own consumption of the installations with which the electricity was produced.
Net production, total
Nuclear energy
Energy released by nuclear fusion.

The energy is used to heat water, which is transformed into high pressure steam. This is used to generate electricity through a steam turbine.
Hydro power
Energy produced by flowing or falling water.
Solar photovoltaic
Energy form the sun converted into electricity.
Other sources
Examples are expansion turbines (in which gases expand under high pressure, as a result of which the turbine produces electricity), (residual) steam, feed water