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In 2019, the material footprint of households in Slovenia amounted to around 15 tons per inhabitant, which is more than the EU average (14.6 tons per inhabitant). Finland, Romania, Estonia and Luxembourg have the largest material footprint with around 28-29 tonnes per capita, the Netherlands the lowest with 7.4 tonnes.

Waste recycling is increasing; in 2018, eight countries (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Italy, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Slovenia) sent at least half of their municipal waste for recycling. However, in Romania, Malta and Cyprus, only a tenth of municipal waste was sent for recycling.

According to a survey in Germany, mobility, housing and food represent the largest material footprint in households, with the footprint increasing with higher income, especially in the area of ​​mobility.

With the largest consumption footprint across five areas (food, mobility, housing, household goods and appliances), they contribute the most to climate change in Luxembourg, Denmark, Malta, Cyprus, Germany, Italy and Ireland, and the least in Bulgaria, Romania and Slovakia. Slovenia is in the middle among the member states.


Charts

Table PG10-1: Decoupling of raw material use, Slovenija
Sources: 

UN Environment, Economy Division (23.10.2022)

Figure PG10-2: Municipal solid waste generation and recyclingin EU, 2018
Sources: 

European Commission, Environment Directorate, Ecoinnovation (23. 10. 2022)

Show data

EU 28[%]

Romania[%]

Poland[%]

Czech Republic[%]

Slovakia[%]

Estonia[%]

Hungary[%]

Croatia[%]

Belgium[%]

Bulgaria[%]

Latvia[%]

Spain[%]

Sweden[%]

Lithuania[%]

Slovenia[%]

Portugal[%]

Italy[%]

Finland[%]

France[%]

Greece [%]

Netherlands[%]

Austria[%]

Ireland [%]

Malta[%]

Luxembourg[%]

Germany[%]

Cyprus (2017)[%]

Denmark[%]

United Kingdom[%]

Country

47

11

34

34

36

29

38

25

55

31

25

35

46

53

54

29

50

42

45

20

56

58

38

10

49

67

10

50

44

Table PG10-3: Material footprint of households in Finland, 2012
Sources: 

Material Footprint of Low-Income Households in Finland, 2012, Michael Lettenmeier (October 23, 2022)

Table PG10-4: Material footprint of Member States
Sources: 

European Union, Eurostat - European statistics (October 23, 2022)

Table PG10-5: Material Footprint of households in Germany, 2019
Sources: 

Wuppertal Institut für Klima, Umwelt, Energie gGmbH (October 23, 2022)

Table PG10-6: Consumer footprint by Member States, 2020
Sources: 

European Commission, JRC, EPLCA (November 25, 2022)