Sustainability in the Industry

Waste Management and Recycling

Impacts, Risks and Opportunities

Sustainability in Waste Management and Recycling

The global mountains of waste contain valuable primary raw materials that are becoming increasingly scarce and expensive. Their recovery involves an entire industry. Collecting, sorting and recycling recyclables plays a transformational role. Waste management is becoming the “missing link” for a new raw materials industry – a strong driver for the circular economy and the development of new material flows.

The shredding and separation of various components, especially in the case of composite materials, can require considerable amounts of energy. The largest amounts of waste arise in the construction industry: Here it is important to drill the thickest board and to reuse vast amounts of concrete, stone and steel after demolition for clever, economical reuse.
Another elephant in the room is plastic: Even though efforts towards closed plastic recycling are constantly increasing, a large part of the plastic waste is still either burned as processed oil, which is harmful to the climate, or it ends up in non-transparent ways in the environment, rivers and seas. Examples of other challenges facing the industry include the recovery of rare earths in unused smartphones or the crushing and recycling of reinforced concrete. Improved collection, sorting, reuse and recycling processes with carbon-neutral processes are an important transformation lever to advance the circular economy. A lot of bulky waste collected by municipalities still contains usable products that can be offered at resale points. Companies in the industry are also driving the development of recycling-friendly products made from easily separable materials. Many cities have set a “zero waste” goal by 2030, in which the recycling industry plays a central role: the amount of waste must be reduced and all recyclable materials recycled. Collaboration with companies and citizens is also important in order to promote new initiatives such as repair cafés or reusable concepts in the catering industry.

The industry includes, for example, the collection, sorting, treatment and recycling of recyclable materials, environmental cleaning and pollutant removal as well as demolition work.

Industry Materiality

Key Fields in the Industry 

Sustainability is different by industry. Learn key material transformations fields in Waste Management and Recycling.

Resources

Climate

Value Chain

 

You can find more details on the fields and criteria for Waste Management and Recycling with score4more explore.

 

EU NACE Classification 

Industry NACE Classes

Unsure if the industry is the right one? A comparison with the EU’s granular NACE classification Rev. 2.1 provides clarity.

Included NACE classes in the industry

E 38.1 Waste collection
E 38.11 Collection of non-hazardous waste
E 38.12 Collection of hazardous waste
E 38.2 Waste recovery
E 38.21 Materials recovery
E 38.22 Energy recovery
E 38.23 Other waste recovery
E 38.3 Waste disposal without recovery
E 38.31 Incineration without energy recovery
E 38.32 Landfilling or permanent storage
E 38.33 Other waste disposal
E 39.0 Remediation activities and other waste management service activities
E 39.00 Remediation activities and other waste management service activities

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