The Sunday Telegraph

Dutch may reverse cut in motorway speed limit as it is ‘only thing politicans agree on’

- By James Crisp

THE Netherland­s is considerin­g reversing an unpopular speed limit imposed because of EU climate targets, after a study showed it barely lowered nitrogen emissions.

Geert Wilders won October’s general election, but has since been mired in lengthy coalition talks, as the country’s four biggest political parties struggle to reach agreement.

One emerging area of possible consensus is revoking a 2019 cut in the motorway speed limit from 130kmh (81mph) to 100kmh (62mph).

“The reason why we are hearing about this is that it is probably the only thing all four parties can agree on,” one Dutch official told The Telegraph.

The old speed limit was reduced when Dutch courts ordered the government to cut air pollution, and in particular nitrogen emissions, to meet EU net zero targets.

Talk of restoring the old limit has been given impetus by a study that showed the lower limit, which only applies between 6am and 7pm, reduced nitrogen emissions by at most 0.2 per cent, on paper.

The potential coalition partners are reported to have submitted questions to the ministries concerned about changing the law, after the current caretaker government ruled out lowering the limit in a debate last month.

“We cannot afford that luxury,” said Christiann­e van der Wal, the outgoing nitrogen minister. “The nitrogen bath is so full that it can’t take even a small additional drop.”

Mr Wilders, dubbed the “Dutch Trump” has called for the Netherland­s to leave the Paris climate agreement, and other parties are also keen to roll back the measure.

Mark Rutte, who is still caretaker prime minister, said it was a “rotten measure” as he imposed the new limit four years ago at the behest of the courts. .

The Dutch nitrogen crisis halted new constructi­on projects in the midst of a housing crisis. It led Mr Rutte to propose compulsory farm buyouts to reduce nitrogen emissions.

In March 2023, the BBB, a Dutch farmer’s party, won a shock landslide victory in regional elections which had become a referendum on Mr Rutte, the leader of the conservati­ve VVD.

The government fell soon afterwards and in a knife-edge election, Mr Wilders, the leader of the hard-Right Freedom Party, won a shock victory.

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