Episode Details
Back to EpisodesE579 Microsoft Got a “Tolerance Decision.” Dutch Dairies Got Closure Orders.
Description
Same nitrogen law, same maps. Microsoft's data center got a "tolerance decision" to keep building. The dairy down the road got a buyout letter and an EU-wide ban on ever milking again.
The Netherlands spent €1.81 billion to close 723 farms for an 8% nitrogen cut. Mediator Johan Remkes said targeting the worst peak emitters could've hit the same target by closing 133 farms for €330 million — a €1.5 billion gap that's political, not environmental. The Bullvine Podcast breaks down the court ruling, the vanishing manure derogation, and why the cleanest farms in Europe were among the first closed.
What You'll Learn
- Why a €1.81B buyout closed 723 farms for just an 8% nitrogen cut
- How the manure derogation collapse adds €40K–€180K a year to a 200-cow dairy
- Why Microsoft kept building while dairies got closure orders
- How precision data made the best Dutch farms the easiest to remove
- What the PAS-melder cohort proves about following rules that get overturned
- Whether your operation sits in the "easy to remove" band
Agriculture is 46% of Dutch nitrogen deposition but was assigned up to 70% of the cuts, while aviation and heavy industry bought time. By 2024, roughly 87% of Dutch dairies produced more manure than they could legally spread, with disposal at €25–30/m³. The same cost mechanism is wired into California's spread limits, Ontario's nutrient plans, and Ireland's derogation fight. The Dutch just hit the wall first.
Listen & Connect Full article and sources: https://www.thebullvine.com/farm-economics-management/microsoft-got-a-tolerance-decision-dutch-dairies-got-closure-orders/ Subscribe for straight-talking dairy analysis. Share this with a producer who needs it.