IN Brief:
- SEFE Energy has moved its Dutch and Belgian operations into a 1,034 sq m office at WTC Rotterdam.
- The relocation brings commercial teams closer to customers in heavy industry, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, food and beverage, power generation, and digital infrastructure.
- The move places SEFE in a major European port and energy hub as gas, power, and hydrogen markets continue to converge.
SEFE Energy has opened a new Dutch headquarters at the World Trade Centre in Rotterdam, consolidating teams previously based in ’s Hertogenbosch, Rijswijk, and Belgium. The move brings the company’s Benelux operations into a single 1,034 sq m office as it strengthens its position in the Netherlands and Belgium.
The relocation is intended to bring account management, customer support, and commercial teams into one workspace as SEFE serves large corporate customers across heavy industry, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, food and beverage, power generation, and digital infrastructure. Rotterdam offers proximity not only to those industrial clusters, but also to the wider logistics and energy infrastructure of the port region, which remains the largest in Europe and is expanding its role in hydrogen and other transition fuels.
The office has been designed as a flexible workspace with meeting areas, collaboration zones, and quieter spaces for day-to-day operational work. Its location in WTC Rotterdam also places SEFE in a building with BREEAM-NL In-Use Very Good certification, while the complex says its electricity is sourced as certified green power.
For SEFE, the move sits within a wider effort to deepen its European commercial footprint across gas, power, and cleaner energy products. The group sells roughly 200 TWh of gas and power each year, serves more than 50,000 customers, and has been widening its portfolio through long-term LNG and hydrogen-linked agreements as industrial buyers balance price risk, security of supply, and decarbonisation targets.
Bringing the Dutch and Belgian teams into one site gives the supplier a more visible base in a market where flexible procurement, multi-country contracting, and transition planning are increasingly converging. In Rotterdam, those demands are concentrated in one of Europe’s busiest industrial and energy corridors.



