Overview
There is only one planet Earth, yet by 2050, the world will be consuming as if there were three.
The traditional linear model of ‘take, make, use, dispose’ is unsustainable and pushes us beyond planetary boundaries.
In a circular economy, products and materials are kept in circulation for as long as possible, and waste and resource use are minimised.
The EU’s transition to a circular economy is crucial for reducing pressure on natural resources, halting biodiversity loss, achieving climate neutrality by 2050, and building a more resilient and competitive Europe.

Latest news

Organisations wishing to engage with the Deployment Group and/or participate in the scoping meeting are invited to confirm their interest by 20 March.

New research into Saudi Arabian olive farms and oil mills reveals how olive waste can provide a range of environmental, economic and soil quality benefits.

Very small pieces of plastic – known as nanoplastic particles – are often under-represented in both research and policy contexts. A study estimates that they may be the dominant form of marine plastic pollution in the North Atlantic.










