Statistics Netherlands

Statistics Netherlands (CBS) enables people to have debates on social issues on the basis of reliable statistical information.The mission of CBS is to publish reliable and coherent statistical information which responds to the needs of Dutch society. The responsibility of CBS is twofold: firstly, to compile (official) national statistics and secondly to compile European (community) statistics.

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  • E
    • जनवरी 2024
      Source: Statistics Netherlands
      Uploaded by: Knoema
      Accessed On: 31 जनवरी, 2024
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      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, oil 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: Full data per month is available from 2015. From 1936 per year and from 1976 per month only the total production, imports and exports are known. Status of the figures: All figures up to and including reporting year 2016 are definite. Data from January 2017 onwards are provisional. Changes as of the 30th of April 2020: Figures of February 2020 has been added. When will new figures be published? Provisional figures: the second month after the end of the reporting period. Revised provisional figures: not later than December of the year following the reporting year. Definite figures: not later than December of the second following year.
    • नवम्बर 2023
      Source: Statistics Netherlands
      Uploaded by: Knoema
      Accessed On: 17 नवम्बर, 2023
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      Data cited at:  CBS StatLine databank https://opendata.cbs.nl/statline/portal.html?_la=en&_catalog=CBS Publication: Energy balance sheet; supply and consumption, sector https://opendata.cbs.nl/portal.html?_la=en&_catalog=CBS&tableId=83989eng&_theme=992 License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/   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 in the energy sector, 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. 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 accordance with international conventions, own use of energy companies only occurs within the energy sector and final energy consumption only for energy consumers. 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 2016 are definite. Figures of 2017 are revised provisional. Changes as of 18 December 2018: In December 2018 the Energy balance has been revised and corrected, concerning the following items: 1. Energy consumption in the chemical industry has been corrected for the years 2012 up to and including 2017. The adjustment results from a correction in the underlying energy data of a few large chemical enterprises. The supplied data from these companies for energy statistics appeared not complete, because the demarcation of the companies was unclear. This incompleteness was discovered by comparing data supplied to Statistics Netherlands with data supplied to the ETS system and data supplied to environmental annual reports. A result of this correction is that final consumption of natural gas is on average 22 PJ higher for the years 2012 up to and including 2017, final consumption of refinery gas is on average 12 PJ higher and electricity consumption is 1 PJ higher. These corrections affect calculated emissions of carbon dioxide which on average are 1.3 Mton higher for the years 2012 up to and including 2017. 2. Non-energy consumption in the chemical industry for the years 1990 up to and including 2017 has been adjusted downwards. A large not plausible change in the use of non-energy consumption of one company triggered additional research on the data of this company considering historical capacity, the rate of utilisation of the capacity, the efficiency and the relation with a neighbouring company. Result of this research was mainly a decrease of the non-energy use and the imports of oil with on average 50 PJ per year. 3. For the years 2015 up to and including 2017 data on bunkers of heavy fuel oil were not plausible. Additional research resulted in improvement of underlying data and figures are now about 20 PJ lower for 2015 and 2016. 4. For coal transit to other countries and stock changes of trading companies have been eliminated from published data. The reasons for this is a request from Eurostat to interpret the statistical regulation in such way that imports only relate to coal for inland consumption. Consequently, the exports of coal is now zero. Coal consumption has not been adapted. 5. In the energy balance (supply and consumption) now three types of coal are distinguished for the years 1990 up to and including 2014. This was already the case for the more recent years. 6. For solar photovoltaic Statistics Netherlands introduced a new method using administrative data. Consequently, the data for the production of solar photovoltaic have been adapted from 2012 onwards. In addition there is improved insight in which part of the solar photovoltaic is consumed by the producers resulting in an increased final consumption of electricity, mainly in the services sector, up to 1 PJ in 2017. 7. Within renewable energy a new energy commodity has been added: ambient energy. This is energy from below the soil surface, the atmosphere or surface water extracted by heat pumps. This adaptation follows Eurostat as a consequence of the adaptation of the EU regulation on energy statistics. The amount of ambient energy, produced and consumed in the sectors services, households and agriculture increases from almost negligible to 7 PJ in 2017. 8. Electricity consumption of the coke-oven plants has been shifted from input for transformations to own use to better follow the Eurostat method. Further the aggregate 'Total other energy commodities' and the sector 'Water supply, waste management unknown' have been added. Changes as of 29 June 2018: Revised provisional figures of 2017 have been added. Changes as of 25 April 2018: Figures on the receipts of electricity and natural gas for 1990 to 2009 in the sub-sectors of the services have been corrected. Previously there were numbers, now there are dots (not available). For the years in question, the data is only available to a limited number of companies at this level of detail and therefore can not be published. Changes as of 16 April 2018: The sequence of the renewable energy commodities has been made the same as the sequence in the renewable energy statistics. Changes as of 11 April 2018: - The years 1990 up to and including 2009 have been added. - The use of the symbols '.' and 'Empty cell' for period 2010 up to and including 2016 have been adjusted in G-S, U Services and 20-21 20-21 Chemistry and pharmaceuticals. When will new figures be published? Revised provisional figures: June/July and December of the following year. Definite figures: December of the second following year.
  • F
    • दिसम्बर 2023
      Source: Statistics Netherlands
      Uploaded by: Knoema
      Accessed On: 23 दिसम्बर, 2023
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      Data cited at:  CBS StatLine databank https://opendata.cbs.nl/statline/portal.html?_la=en&_catalog=CBS Publication: Financial balance sheets and transactions by sectors; National Accounts https://opendata.cbs.nl/portal.html?_la=en&_catalog=CBS&tableId=84099eng&_theme=1040 License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/   This table presents financial transactions, other changes in assets and financial balance sheets of the sectors of the Dutch economy. It enables insight in many financial aspects in the Netherlands. Such as the magnitude of the debt of the government, the mortgage debt of households, the assets of investment funds in shares, the loans lent by financial corporations. Sectors are presented both consolidated and non-consolidated in this table. Data available from: Annual figures from 1995. Quarterly figures from first quarter 1999. Status of the figures: The figures from 1995 up to and including 2015 are final. Data of 2016, 2017 and 2018 are provisional. Changes as of December 24th 2018: Data of the third quarter 2018 have been added to this table. The grouping of the classification (Periods) is adjusted to comply with Statistics Netherlands standards. Consolidated transferable deposits and long-term loans of government has been adjusted in the yearly and quarterly figures of 2004 until 2017 and the first quarter of 2018. Part of government debt was recorded as debt to institutions outside general government, while it is debt to institutions inside general government. Debt from institutions inside general government are not part of consolidated government debt. Accordingly, the government debt level has become lower. Adjustments as of July 26th 2018: The general government debt and the short-term loans taken out by the government in this table differ from the government finance statistics which are also published by Statistics Netherlands separately. This is due to an adjustment in the government finance statistics’ figures after closing the quarterly estimates. The transactions in short-term loans taken out by the government in the first quarter of 2018 are EUR 1.8 billion higher in government finance statistics publications, which also means that general government debt is 1.8 billion higher at the end of the first quarter. The debt ratio at the end of the first quarter of 2018 thus becomes 55.2 percent. In the sector accounts these changes will be implemented at the next opportunity (September 2018). When will new figures be published? Annual figures: Provisional data are published 6 months after the end of the reporting year. Final data are released 18 months after the end of the reporting year. Quarterly figures: The first quarterly estimate is available 85 days after the end of each reporting quarter. The first quarter may be revised in September, the second quarter in December. Should further quarterly information become available thereafter, the estimates for the first three quarters may be revised in March. If (new) annual figures become available in June, the quarterly figures will be revised again to bring them in line with the annual figures.
    • जुलाई 2017
      Source: Statistics Netherlands
      Uploaded by: Raviraj Mahendran
      Accessed On: 26 सितम्बर, 2017
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      Data cited at:  CBS StatLine databank https://opendata.cbs.nl/statline/portal.html?_la=en&_catalog=CBS Publication: Financial corporations; balance sheet 1998-2016 https://opendata.cbs.nl/portal.html?_la=en&_catalog=CBS&tableId=82962ENG&_theme=980 License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/   This dataset consists of the balance sheet of financial corporations. It enables to compare institutional investors with monetary financial institutions, captive financial institutions and money lenders and other financial intermediaries and financial auxiliaries
    • मार्च 2018
      Source: Statistics Netherlands
      Uploaded by: Raviraj Mahendran
      Accessed On: 06 अप्रैल, 2018
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      Data cited at:  CBS StatLine databank https://opendata.cbs.nl/statline/portal.html?_la=en&_catalog=CBS Publication: Quarterly figures investments of institutional investors 1996-2017 https://opendata.cbs.nl/portal.html?_la=en&_catalog=CBS&tableId=82824ENG&_theme=980 License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/   This dataset covers investments of institutional investors with a breakdown by type of investment. It enables analyzing on a quarterly basis shifts over time in the investment portfolio of institutional investors. This is possible for the total of institutional investors, and for each of the three groups: pension funds, insurance corporations and non-MMF investment funds
  • N
    • अगस्त 2017
      Source: Statistics Netherlands
      Uploaded by: Knoema
      Accessed On: 18 अक्तूबर, 2020
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      Data cited at:  CBS StatLine databank https://opendata.cbs.nl/statline/portal.html?_la=en&_catalog=CBS Publication: Non-financial balance sheets; national accounts https://opendata.cbs.nl/portal.html?_la=en&_catalog=CBS&tableId=82641ENG&_theme=1042 License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/   This table contains figures on non-financial balance sheets. The balance sheets show the market value of non-financial assets. Changes in the value of non-financial assets are also presented in this table. These changes are, for example, the result of price changes or the result of purchases minus sales of non-financial assets. Non-financial balance sheets are part of the National Accounts. The balance sheets are presented by different types of assets for the economy as a whole and for the different institutional sectors in the Dutch economy. Figures of the sectors households and non-profit institutions serving households (NPISH) are from reporting year 2013 onwards no longer separately published. Only their aggregate will be published. The reason for this change is that reliable estimates for NPISH for recent years are no longer available. Data available from: 1995 Status of the figures: The figures for the most recent reporting year 2016 are provisional. The status of the figures for other years is final. Changes as from 11 August 2017: Provisional figures on the reporting year 2016 have been added. - The volume-indices of the inventories of the general government were mistakenly displayed with a dot (.). This has now been corrected and the volume-indices for the base year are now set to 100. - Due to data on the reporting years 1995-2001 becoming available, this table has been expanded. The years 1995-2000 are completely new, for the year 2001 only the closing balance sheet was displayed. Now figures on opening balance sheet, revaluation, capital formation, other changes in volume and statistical discrepancy are added for this reporting year. Changes as from 25 October 2016: A number of corrections have been applied as a result of mistakes in the calculations for the years 2002, 2003, 2004, 2009, 2011, 2012 and 2015. These mistakes did not result in any changes in the totals for the closing balance sheet, but led to incorrect aggregations of sectors or type of non-financial asset. Furthermore the calculation method of the volume indices have been harmonised for the capital stock and non-financial balance sheets. Moreover, the volume index will now be calculated on the basis of rounded figures. Because of these changes in method a maximum difference of 85.6 percentage points occurs for series of less than 100 mln. A maximum difference of 16.2 percentage points occurs for series larger than 100 mln. Volume indices of series which contain 0 mln of non-financial assets every year are set at 100, rather than hidden. The calculation method of consumer durables has been changed as well, to account for the purchase of lease cars by consumers. Correction as of 5 February 2016: As a result of a mistake in the calculation the opening balance sheet of 2006 is not equal to the closing balance sheet of 2005. The mistake has been corrected. Correction as of 4 November 2015: The volume-indices of total of non-financial assets 2010-2014 have been changed because consumer durables do not belong to this category and were previously included. When will new figures be published? Provisional data are published 6 months after the end of the reporting year. Final data are released 18 months after the end of the reporting year. Since the end of June 2016 the release and revision policy of the national accounts have been changed. References to additional information about these changes can be found in section 3.