Concepts

Circular Economy

An economic model that keeps materials in use as long as possible through reuse, repair, remanufacturing and recycling, cutting waste and raw-material demand. It is the idea behind WEEE, ELV, the Ecodesign Regulation and the SCIP database.

Updated
2026-06-12

Overview

The circular economy keeps materials in productive use for as long as possible. Instead of the linear take, make and dispose pattern, products and their parts are reused, repaired, remanufactured and finally recycled, so that what would have been waste feeds back into new production. Less ends up in landfill and less virgin raw material has to be extracted.

This is the thinking behind a whole cluster of EU rules. The Waste Framework Directive sets the overall hierarchy, WEEE and ELV target electronics and vehicles at end of life, the Ecodesign Regulation pushes circular design from the start, and the SCIP database tracks substances of concern so that recyclers know what they are handling.

Key point

Circularity is not just recycling at the end. The bigger gains come earlier, from designing products to last, to be repaired and to be taken apart, which is why design-stage rules like the Ecodesign Regulation matter so much.

How the pieces fit

The waste hierarchy ranks options from best to worst, and the circular economy is essentially that hierarchy applied across a product's whole life.

Prevention
Avoid creating waste in the first place
Reuse and repair
Keep products working for longer
Recycling
Recover materials when products do reach end of life

Note: general educational information, not legal advice. Check the official source before relying on it.

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circular economysustainabilityEUwaste