Groningen Will Build 700 New Electricity Substations
Rising demand is forcing major grid expansion, promising energy security and green growth, but also bringing higher costs and local disruption.
Groningen will see 700 new electricity substations by 2035 to meet soaring demand, which is expected to quadruple by 2050. The decline of gas extraction, economic growth, and electrification of homes, transport, and businesses is straining the grid. Without upgrades, housing projects, local services, and sustainability goals risk stalling.
Benefits for Groningen
Expanding the grid will:
Enable growth in housing, mobility, and public services.
Support renewable energy and hydrogen projects, strengthening Groningen’s role in the energy transition.
Futureproof the system through options like battery storage and smarter grid management.
Challenges Ahead
The rollout also brings problems:
High costs and congestion: National grid upgrades may cost up to €200 billion by 2040, pushing electricity prices higher.
Neighbourhood disruption: Hundreds of substations will need street space, raising the risk of protests like those seen in Amsterdam.
Workforce shortages: Thousands of technicians are needed, and slow permitting could delay construction.
Moving Forward
Experts say Groningen must communicate clearly with residents, speed up training and permits, and invest in local solutions like battery pilots. Done right, the project can deliver energy security and economic growth. Handled poorly, it risks delays, higher bills, and public resistance.