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gasbedrijf

Gasbedrijf is a term used to describe an organization that provides natural gas to households and businesses, and that may operate the associated gas infrastructure. In many markets the term covers both gas suppliers (retailers) and gas distribution companies, as well as entities involved in gas production, storage, and trading. A gasbedrijf procures gas on wholesale markets, transports it through transmission networks, and distributes it to end users via local networks. It handles metering, billing, customer service, and safety obligations, and may also advise customers on energy efficiency and pricing. In many countries the gas network is a regulated monopoly, with the network operator kept separate from the supplier to promote competition, a principle known as unbundling.

Regulation and market structure are typically national and European. Authorities set safe operation requirements, terms for

History and trends reflect the sector’s evolution. Municipal gasworks were established in the 19th century to

Safety remains central: odorants are added to natural gas to aid leak detection; operators perform regular

accessing
the
network,
and,
in
some
cases,
price
controls.
In
the
Netherlands
and
other
EU
countries,
regulators
oversee
competition,
consumer
protection,
and
system
reliability.
The
gas
network
is
often
owned
or
operated
by
specialized
transmission
and
distribution
companies,
distinct
from
the
energy
suppliers.
supply
lighting,
later
transitioning
to
natural
gas
networks
after
offshore
discoveries.
Deregulation
in
the
late
20th
century
encouraged
competition
and
private
ownership
in
many
regions.
Today,
gas
companies
confront
decarbonization
pressures,
including
reducing
methane
leakage
and
integrating
hydrogen
and
biomethane
into
networks
as
part
of
the
broader
energy
transition.
pipeline
integrity
checks,
and
customers
are
provided
with
emergency
guidance
and
contact
numbers.