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Briefing
In this briefing, we show trends in household consumption in Europe from 2000 to 2019 and the resulting environmental and climate pressures from every stage of a product’s life cycle (value chain) related to household consumption. This includes resource extraction, production and processing, transportation, consumption and waste management. The briefing is underpinned by a report on consumption and the environment in Europe’s circular economy from the EEA’s European Topic Centre on Circular Economy and Resource Use (ETC/CE). Conditions and pathways for sustainable and circular consumption in Europe are discussed in a separate .
The economic value of household consumption in the EU — measured by total EU household expenditure — increased by 69% between 2000 and 2019 from EUR 4.3 trillion to EUR 7.3 trillion. Consumption expenditure dropped by 8% between 2019 and 2020, mainly because of the COVID-19 pandemic-related economic downturn. Three areas of household consumption were responsible for about three-quarters of EU household consumption expenditure in 2019: food (26%), services (25%) and housing (24%). The remaining consumption expenditure was on clothing and footwear, mobility, and household goods and services.
Using EU statistics, this briefing interprets household consumption in Europe more broadly than just looking at consumption expenditure carried out by households. It also includes consumption expenditure by non-profit institutions serving households and governments (e.g. sports clubs or churches) — to the extent that this is linked to consumption by households — as well as households’ investments in dwellings.
We distinguish between six consumption domains (areas of consumption) when we analyse trends in and pressures from EU household consumption:
These consumption domains are aggregated from the 12 domains in the Eurostat COICOP (Classification of Individual Consumption by Purpose) system to enable comparison between a limited number of large consumption areas. More details on the scope and the aggregated consumption domains can be found in the underpinning report.
The observed increases in EU household consumption expenditure from 2000 to 2019, in current prices, can be explained by an increase in consumption volumes of 26%, prices/inflation of 34% and population growth of 4%. The consumption volumes are most relevant for analysing environmental and climate pressures from household consumption, as they are the root cause behind them.
Figure 1 shows consumption volume trends from 2000 to 2019 and 2020, with the year 2000 indexed to 100. It shows which areas of consumption have increased most in volume as a percentage of consumption levels in the year 2000. Volumes increased for all consumption areas between 2000 and 2019, after which they decreased slightly because of the COVID-19-related economic downturn. The volume increase from 2000 to 2019 was highest for the consumption areas household goods and services (household equipment, appliances, and information and communications technology) and services (health, education, finance, recreation and other), which both increased by over 40% (47% and 43%, respectively). The consumption areas housing, and clothing and footwear, increased in volume by over 20% (24% and 21%, respectively). Mobility and food consumption increased in volume the least (14% and 10%, respectively).
Note: The chain-linked volume series is a series of economic data from successive years. It is expressed in constant terms by computing the production volume for each year at the prices of the preceding year, and then chain linking the data to obtain a time series from which the effects of price changes have been removed.
Source: Eurostat — Final consumption expenditure of households by consumption purpose (COICOP 3-digit), EU-27.
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European household consumption is dependent on trade with the rest of the world. Looking at the share of the value chain located outside Europe, 7% of activities for services, 9% for housing, 13% for food, 10% for mobility, 16% for household goods and services and for food, and 32% for clothing and footwear are located outside Europe (ETC/WMGE, 2019). Since 2000, the non-EU share in terms of value added has steadily increased for all consumption domains. This means that we are increasingly relying on production and other activities outside Europe to enable household consumption in Europe.
EU household consumption pressures the environment and climate through its value chain, both in the EU and in other regions of the world. These pressures, for which there are available data and for which the selected accounting method can be applied, are analysed and discussed in the next section.
European household consumption significantly pressures the environment and contributes to climate change due to production and consumption activities within Europe itself and abroad, in the context of increasingly globalised value chains (EEA, 2019). The overall (global) pressures are captured in this briefing in terms of consumption footprints and encompass pressures caused by all production and consumption activities occurring in the full value chain of goods and services consumed in Europe.
The accounting method used for this briefing and its underpinning report is ‘consumption-based’ (as opposed to ‘production-based’). Consumption-based environmental accounting estimates environmental pressures from the production of goods and services, consumed in a specific territory, regardless of where in the world these goods and services are produced. There are many methods to estimate consumption-based environmental pressures, including the Consumption Footprint assessment framework of the European Commission (European Commission, 2022), the United Nations Environment Programme’s Sustainable Consumption and Production Hotspot Analysis Tool (SCP-HAT) initiative and the EEA’s consumption footprint indicator methodology (EEA, 2022).
For this briefing, the environmentally extended multi-regional input-output (EE-MRIO) model EXIOBASE v.3.8.2 (Stadler et al., 2021) was used to allocate emissions and resource use to consumption domains. EXIOBASE translates economic transactions happening within an economy and within 1 year into environmental pressures by adding environmental extensions to supply and demand tables. These environmental extensions are coefficients that estimate emissions to the environment, stemming from economic activities triggered by corresponding economic transactions. EXIOBASE offers a top-down approach to consumption-based environmental accounting and is well-suited to provide a macro-perspective of Europe in a global context. Thus, it is considered to give a comprehensive picture at an aggregated level. The full methodology is described in Annex 1 of the underpinning report.
Figure 2 shows selected environmental and climate pressures related to EU household consumption for 2000-2020. Since 2020 was an abnormal year due to COVID-19, the analysis focuses on the period 2000-2019.
Note: NOx, nitrogen oxides; PM, particulate matter; SOx, sulphur oxides. Greenhouse gas emissions in CO2 equivalents.
Source: ETC CE’s elaborations based on EXIOBASE v3.8.2.
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For water use and material use, pressures from household consumption in 2019 were higher than in 2000, showing an increase of 4% for material use and 6% for water use. For land use, greenhouse gas emissions and particulate matter, pressures decreased slightly by 8% for land use, 9% for greenhouse gas emissions and 4% for particulate matter in the period. For the air emissions of NOx and SOx, pressures decreased more significantly (19% and 41%, respectively) in the period. Other pressures — toxicity, water pollution, etc. — are not covered by the accounting method used here and are therefore not discussed further.
Overall, it seems that most pressures from household consumption in Europe have not changed significantly from 2000 to 2019. Thus, efforts to significantly decouple and decrease environmental and climate pressures from consumption have not been successful, except for the emissions of NOx and SOx to air, for which ambitious EU policies and efficiency gains have contributed to reducing pressures. In addition, major structural changes to the European economy, some industries relocating outside of Europe, and other factors may have contributed to these reductions (EEA, 2020a).
As household consumption levels in Europe continue to rise, it is questionable how long increases in efficiency can compensate for growth in consumption. It seems unlikely that absolute decoupling of economic growth from resource use and environmental pressures can be achieved in the long run (EEA, 2021). The scale and rate of decoupling pressures from economic growth is currently too small to reach the level where we consume within the limits of our planet. Environmental and climate pressures and impacts from consumption accumulate over the years, and many ecosystems’ are under pressure beyond their regeneration capacity (EEA, 2020b). Scientific evidence suggests that the levels of pressures associated with Europe’s consumption are so high that the planet’s ability to recover from them is seriously compromised.
The EU policy objective around consumption, as expressed in the Eighth Environmental Action Programme, calls for a significant reduction in the EU’s consumption footprint to bring European consumption-related impacts within planetary boundaries (EU, 2022). To achieve more household sustainable consumption, the increase in some of the consumption-related pressures and impacts should be prevented and impacts be significantly reduced to a level that is sustainable in the long run. This will require substantially transforming consumption and production systems.
EEA, 2019, The European environment — state and outlook 2020: knowledge for transition to a sustainable Europe, European Environment Agency (https://www.eea.europa.eu/soer/publications/soer-2020) accessed 25 April 2022.
EEA, 2020a, Drivers of change of relevance for Europe’s environment and sustainability, EEA Report No 25/2019, European Environment Agency (https://www.eea.europa.eu/publications/drivers-of-change) accessed 26 April 2022.
EEA, 2020b, Is Europe living within the limits of our planet?, EEA Report No 1/2020, European Environment Agency (https://www.eea.europa.eu/publications/is-europe-living-within-the-planets-limits) accessed 11 May 2023.
EEA, 2021, Growth without economic growth, EEA Briefing, European Environment Agency (https://www.eea.europa.eu/publications/growth-without-economic-growth) accessed 28 November 2022.
EEA, 2022, ‘Europe’s consumption footprint’, European Environment Agency (https://www.eea.europa.eu/ims/europe2019s-consumption-footprint) accessed 18 October 2022.
ETC/WMGE, 2019, Textiles and the environment in a circular economy, Eionet Report No 6/2019, European Topic Centre for Waste and Materials in a Green Economy (https://www.eionet.europa.eu/etcs/etc-wmge/products/etc-reports/textiles-and-the-environment-in-a-circular-economy) accessed 26 March 2020.
EU, 2022, Decision (EU) 2022/591 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 6 April 2022 on a general Union environment action programme to 2030 (OJ L 114, 12.4.2022, p. 22-36).
European Commission, 2022, ‘Consumption footprint platform’ (https://eplca.jrc.ec.europa.eu/ConsumptionFootprintPlatform.html) accessed 28 October 2022.
Stadler, K., et al., 2021, ‘EXIOBASE 3’ (https://zenodo.org/record/5589597) accessed 18 October 2022.
Briefing no. 12/2023
Title: Environment and climate pressures from household consumption in Europe
EN HTML: TH-AM-23-014-EN-Q - ISBN: 978-92-9480-574-4 - ISSN: 2467-3196 - doi: 10.2800/93455
EN PDF: TH-AM-23-014-EN-N - ISBN: 978-92-9480-573-7 - ISSN: 2467-3196 - doi: 10.2800/08441
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