Stories and examples of sustainable best practice
The Hague Convention Bureau has gathered together stories and examples of sustainable best practices from leading venues across the city. Six of the city’s leading venues have provided in-depth case studies, descriptions and advice for organisers looking to make their events more sustainable in a series of interviews.
The venues taking part are:
– Amare
– Fokker Terminal
– Madurodam
– Museon-Omniversum
– The Louwman Museum
– World Forum
The interviews are available via: https://thehague.com/conventionbureau/en/news.
The Hague, known globally as the city of Impact, Peace and Justice is a global leader in association events, which is why the municipality was an early adopter of sustainable practices – targeting a 95% reduction of greenhouse gasses by 2050. In support, many of the city’s leading venues have joined the initiative to become a climate-neutral city.

The Hague, known global as the city of Impact, Peace and Justice is a global leader in association events, which is why the municipality was an early adopter of sustainable practices – targeting a 95% reduction of greenhouse gasses by 2050. In support, many of the city’s leading venues have joined the initiative to become a climate-neutral city.
Examples of the venues’ work towards a greener city include:
– The Louwman Museum’s reduction in energy consumption and investment in thermal energy storage and solar power.
– The Fokker Terminal became Co2-neutral in 2019 and is currently researching how geothermal energy can be implemented across events.
– As the city’s newest venue, Amare features rainwater-flushed toilets, zero waste catering and nesting boxes located across the building’s green roof.
– As The Hague’s largest conference venue, with over 50 years of experience delivering large-scale Events, World Forum has banned plastics, introduced a green roof, added solar panels and focused on the development of climate-friendly hybrid event solutions.