Royal Netherlands Sea Rescue Institution


The Royal Netherlands Sea Rescue Institution is the voluntary organization in the Netherlands tasked with saving lives at sea. For that purpose, it maintains 45 lifeboat stations along the Dutch coast of the North Sea and Wadden Sea and on the IJsselmeer. It maintains 78 boats ranging from small boat to 21 meter long RHIBs. It also provides lifeguard services at some beaches on the Frisian Islands in the waddensea, and the beach of Wassenaar. Its headquarters have been in IJmuiden since 1996.
The KNRM was created May 22, 1991 by merging the Koninklijke Noord- en Zuid-Hollandsche Redding-Maatschappij, called the Noord, and the Koninklijke Zuid-Hollandsche Maatschappij tot Redding van Schipbreukelingen, called the Zuid. Between 1824 and 2006, they answered 36358 distress calls and saved 79887 people out of distress situations.
Yearly they have about 1700 distress calls with about 3500 people saved.
The KNRM also operates the Dutch Radio Medical Service and provides medical advice by radio to about 900 ships each year.
Like the comparable Royal National Lifeboat Institution, which operates in the UK and Ireland, and the German Maritime Search and Rescue Service, the KNRM is entirely financed by private donations.

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