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The waste recycling rate in Europe has steadily increased due to EU binding recycling targets, indicating progress towards using more waste as a resource and achieving a circular economy. However, progress has stagnated recently and in some cases reversed, with total waste recycling rates lower in 2022 than a decade earlier. The majority of waste was still disposed of through incineration or landfill operations in 2022. Achieving circularity and minimising environmental impacts from natural resource use requires continuous ambitious waste management policies to incentivise recycling and discourage landfills and incineration.
Figure 1. Recycling rates in Europe by waste stream
Rising demand for primary resources weakens the EU's material self-sufficiency, imposing pressure on the environment. Recycling is the only mainstream waste management operation preventing valuable resources in our waste from being destroyed. Using recycled material for new product manufacturing avoids large environmental impacts associated with the extraction and processing of natural resources. Increasing recycled material is a desired approach to achieving sustainability, material self-sufficiency and other benefits of a circular economy.
Recycling rates of municipal and packaging waste as well as e-waste (which also represent significant sources of critical raw materials) have been slowly increasing in general, indicating a move towards a more circular economy. The overall recycling rate, i.e. the ratio between total waste generated excluding major mineral wastes and the quantities that were managed through recycling, stood at 44% in 2022. The highest recycling rate in 2022 was registered for packaging (65%) followed by municipal (49%) and e-waste (32%).
EU targets for waste management are key drivers of increasing recycling rates:
In total, EU waste legislation includes more than 30 binding targets for the period 2015-2030.
Until recently, the progress made for these three key waste streams has been more significant than in overall recycling. This reflects the importance of the strong EU policies in driving improvements in waste management. However, in recent years, the recycling rates for all three waste streams have been stagnating and the overall recycling rate has been decreasing since 2018 and remains below 50%, meaning the majority of generated waste is disposed of in landfills and incineration plants.
The ambition that has traditionally underpinned EU waste policy needs to be preserved and reinforced so that recycling is further supported, while landfilling and incineration is discouraged, for the circular economy to continue its progress.
Figure 2. Municipal waste recycling rates in Europe by country
All countries considered, except for Sweden, have increased their municipal waste recycling rates since 2004, which clearly indicates improvements in waste management. Some countries (Lithuania, Latvia, Slovenia and Slovakia) have even achieved remarkable improvements, registering increases of more than 40 percentage points.
The difference in municipal waste recycling performance between the countries with the highest and lowest recycling rates is large. In 2022, rates ranged from 69% in Germany to 12% in Romania. Nine countries, namely Germany, Austria, Slovenia, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Italy, Switzerland and Latvia achieved recycling rates of 50% or higher, while another four countries (Romania, Malta, Cyprus, Greece) recycled less than 20% of municipal waste.
However, several countries with relatively low recycling rates made little progress over the past 15 years, and in 2023, 18 EU Member States were identified as being at risk of not meeting the recycling target for 2025 set in the Waste Framework Directive (recycling 55% of municipal waste).