From wikipedia:
In C, two null pointers of any type are guaranteed to compare equal.[7] The macro NULL is defined as an implementation-defined null pointer constant,[3] which in C99 can be portably expressed as the integer value 0 converted implicitly or explicitly to the type void*.[8] Note, though, that the physical address zero is often directly accessible by hardware (for instance, it is directly accessible in x86 real mode, and it is where the interrupt table is stored), but modern operating systems usually map virtual address spaces in such a way that accessing address zero is forbidden.