Circular economy in Europe: 12.2% achieved, 24% targeted by 2030
In 2024, 12.2% of materials consumed in Europe came from recycling or reuse. The EU's objective is to reach 24% by 2030. The European Environment Agency warns: without a major acceleration, the EU will not meet the target.
In 2024, the share of circular materials in the European economy — those derived from recycling or reuse — reached 12.2% of total consumption. That is 1.5 percentage points more than in 2010. Real progress, but slow.
The European Environment Agency (EEA) is direct in its analysis: at the current rate, the European Union will not manage to double this rate by 2030, as its Green Industrial Pact objective requires. Getting from 12.2% to 24% in under six years would require roughly the same progress achieved over the past fourteen years.
The disparities between countries are striking. The Netherlands already reaches 32.7% — beyond the 2030 target. Romania stands at 1.3%. This heterogeneity reveals that the barrier is not technological: it is structural — product design, collection policies, secondary recycling markets.
One rarely highlighted figure deserves attention: the European Commission estimates that 90% of global biodiversity loss is linked to the extraction and processing of resources. Circularity is not merely an economic question — it is also a fundamental ecological condition.
The 2030 target is ambitious. The path is documented. What is missing is speed.
Further reading: The Circular Economy Is Not a Label — It Is an Industrial Model