More than 3,000 homes have had to be demolished due to earthquake damage and from 2015, gas production has been scaled down.
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00:00 Addy grew up in this house in Groningen, but because of earthquakes it is no longer safe
00:06 to live.
00:07 "The walls are breaking outside and the inside is breaking."
00:13 The earthquakes are caused by the extraction of gas from the Groningen gas field, the largest
00:18 one in Europe.
00:20 Thousands of residents have struggled to get compensation.
00:23 "It has been said that it has to be reinforced, so they are going to start with that.
00:30 They have been planning to start with that for a long time.
00:33 The procedures are all so long and so complicated and so money wasting, while the money that
00:43 actually has to go to the houses or to the people, that all takes a long time."
00:49 The Groningen gas field's riches laid the foundation for the Dutch welfare state.
00:53 "The discovery of the Groningen gas field was really important to the Dutch economy
00:57 because it enabled us to make annual revenues of about 15 billion euros in the beginning.
01:05 So it was a huge contribution to the Dutch economy and also the Dutch state had a major
01:12 share in these revenues.
01:13 About 80 percent of these revenues went to the Dutch state, to the Dutch society."
01:18 The first earthquake hit in 1986.
01:20 In 2012, a 3.6 scale earthquake caused massive damage and public sentiment started to shift.
01:28 A parliamentary inquiry earlier this year found that the government had placed too much
01:32 importance on gas extraction.
01:35 On the 1st of October, the Groningen gas field will be closed.
01:39 Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte visited affected residents last Friday.
01:43 "It's important because we know there is a direct link between the earthquake and gas
01:48 extraction and luckily we are able to do without the Groningen gas field.
01:54 So that's why it's crucial to close this, because of the safety of people."
01:59 In case of an exceptionally cold winter, the field could be tapped one last time.
02:04 "Behind me you can see a gas installation that is now partially dismantled.
02:09 Because many of these dotted around the Groningen countryside atop of this largest onshore gas
02:15 field in Europe.
02:16 Now the gas extraction will end, but the earthquakes it has caused will continue for many decades
02:22 to come."
02:23 This is Fernandes Van Tetz reporting for Euronews, Groningen.
02:26 [SWOOSH]
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