cover image: Techno-economic and environmental assessment of construction and demolition waste management in the European Union :Status quo and prospective potential

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Techno-economic and environmental assessment of construction and demolition waste management in the European Union :Status quo and prospective potential

11 Jan 2024

Construction and demolition waste (CDW) accounts for almost 40% of all waste generated in the EU. The European Commission is taking important binding and non-binding legislative actions to ensure CDW is managed in an environmentally sound manner and contributes to the circular economy. This report reviews, analyses and reconciles data on CDW generation, composition and management at EU level. It also performs an environmental and techno-economic assessment of the most important management technologies through Life Cycle Assessment and Costing for individual material fractions. Results show that, subject to the uptake of best available technologies, recycling and preparing for reuse are preferred over incineration and landfilling for most of the individual material fractions of CDW because of the associated environmental benefits. However, this shift comes with increased costs (while indicating positive societal gains when internalising externalities) for most material fractions, except for soils and dredging spoils, for which uncertainties are significant, and for metals which are already today profitably reused and recycled. The study further estimates the potential for recycling and preparing for reuse for each individual material fraction of CDW, indicating that, excluding excavated soils and dredging spoils due to their significant uncertainty, 83% of CDW can potentially be sent for preparing for reuse and recycling (of which potentially 16% for preparing for reuse). Taking as the baseline the status quo of CDW management in the EU in 2020 for each material fraction, and excluding excavated soils and dredging spoils, this would lead to an additional 33 Mt CO2 equivalent (CO2 eq.) savings annually (more than for example the combined annual CO2 eq. emissions from Estonia, Latvia and Luxembourg) at a net cost of EUR 6.3 billion when assuming recycling only (up to 34 Mt CO2 eq. savings at a net saving of approximately EUR 2.9 billion when including excavated soils and dredging spoils). Under stylised assumptions and when considering the maximum preparing for reuse and recycling scenario, also excluding excavated soils and dredging spoils, a total reduction of about 48 Mt CO2 eq. with a net saving of approximately EUR 7.3 billion could potentially be achieved (up to 51.5 Mt CO2 eq. savings at a net saving of approximately EUR 19.5 billion when including excavated soils and dredging spoils). Thus, preparing for reuse should be promoted along with recycling to maximise potential environmental and economic benefits.
circular economy hazardous waste environmental impact building industry costing waste management research report eu member state economic consequence industrial waste recycling technology

Authors

Joint Research Centre, European Commission, Cristóbal García, Jorge, Caro, Dario, Foster, Gillian, Pristerà, Giulia, Gallo, Federico, Tonini, Davide

Catalogue number
KJ-NA-31-784-EN-N
Citation
European Commission, Joint Research Centre, Cristóbal García, J., Caro, D., Foster, G. et al., Techno-economic and environmental assessment of construction and demolition waste management in the European Union – Status quo and prospective potential , Publications Office of the European Union, 2023, https://data.europa.eu/doi/10.2760/721895
DOI
https://data.europa.eu/doi/10.2760/721895
ISBN
978-92-68-10856-7
ISSN
1831-9424
Pages
43
Published in
Belgium
Themes
Environment — Ecology , Industry — Enterprise — Services

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