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# 52011DC0571

**COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS Roadmap to a Resource Efficient Europe /\* COM/2011/0571 final \*/**

  

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1........... Challenges and opportunities for
Europe.......................................................................... 2

2........... Making Europe resource efficient.................................................................................... 3

3........... Transforming the Economy.............................................................................................. 4

3.1........ Sustainable consumption and
production......................................................................... 5

3.2........ Turning waste into a resource.......................................................................................... 5

3.3........ Supporting research and
innovation................................................................................. 5

3.4........ Environmentally harmful subsidies
and getting the prices right............................................ 5

4........... Natural Capital and Ecosystem
Services.......................................................................... 5

4.1........ Ecosystem services......................................................................................................... 5

4.2........ Biodiversity.................................................................................................................... 5

4.3........ Minerals and metals........................................................................................................ 5

4.4........ Water............................................................................................................................. 5

4.5........ Air................................................................................................................................. 5

4.6........ Land and soils................................................................................................................ 5

4.7........ Marine resources............................................................................................................ 5

5........... Key sectors.................................................................................................................... 5

5.1........ Addressing food............................................................................................................. 5

5.2........ Improving buildings......................................................................................................... 5

5.3........ Ensuring efficient mobility................................................................................................ 5

6........... Governance and monitoring............................................................................................. 5

6.1........ New pathways to action on
resource efficiency................................................................ 5

6.2........ Supporting resource efficiency
internationally................................................................... 5

6.3........ Improving the delivery of
benefits from EU environmental measures................................. 5

7........... Conclusion..................................................................................................................... 5

Annex: Resource efficiency – the interlinks
between sectors and resources, and EU policy initiatives 5

1.
Challenges and opportunities for Europe

Europe has enjoyed many decades of growth in wealth and
wellbeing, based on intensive use of resources. But today it faces the dual
challenge of stimulating the growth needed to provide jobs and well-being to
its citizens, and of ensuring that the quality of this growth leads to a
sustainable future. To tackle these challenges and turn them into opportunities
our economy will require a fundamental transformation within a generation – in
energy, industry, agriculture, fisheries and transport systems, and in producer
and consumer behaviour. Preparing that transformation in a timely, predictable
and controlled manner will allow us to further develop
our wealth and wellbeing, whilst reducing the levels and impact of our resource
use.

Over the 20th century, the world increased its fossil fuel
use by a factor of 12, whilst extracting 34 times more material resources. Today
in the EU, each person consumes 16 tonnes of materials annually, of which 6 tonnes
are wasted, with half going to landfill. Trends show, however, that the era of
plentiful and cheap resources is over. Businesses are
facing rising costs for essential raw materials and minerals, their scarcity
and price volatility are having a damaging effect on the economy. Sources of minerals, metals and energy, as well as stocks of fish,
timber, water, fertile soils, clean air, biomass, biodiversity are all under
pressure, as is the stability of the climate system. Whilst demand for food, feed and fibre may
increase by 70% by 2050, 60% of the world’s major ecosystems that help produce
these resources have already been degraded or are used unsustainably. If we
carry on using resources at the current rate, by 2050 we will need, on
aggregate, the equivalent of more than two planets to sustain us, and the
aspirations of many for a better quality of life will not be achieved.

Our
economic system still encourages the inefficient use of resources by pricing some
below true costs. The World Business Council for Sustainable Development
estimates that by 2050 we will need a 4 to 10 fold increase in resource
efficiency, with significant improvements needed already by 2020. Some dynamic businesses have
recognised the benefits of a more productive use of resources, yet many
enterprises and consumers have not yet realised the
scale and urgency of the required transformations. Promoting efficient use of
resources makes a lot of business sense and should help improve their
competitiveness and profitability. It is therefore
an integral part of the EU's agenda for global competitiveness. It also helps ensure a
sustainable recovery from the economic crisis and it can boost employment.

Transformation
will need a policy framework that creates a playing field, where innovation and
resource efficiency are rewarded, creating economic opportunities and improved security of supply through
product redesign, sustainable management of environmental resources, greater
reuse, recycling and substitution of materials and resource savings. Decoupling
growth from resource use and unlocking these new
sources of growth needs coherence and integration in the policies that shape our
economy and our lifestyles. Action on climate change has already led the way in
helping to decouple growth from the use of carbon.

The Europe 2020
Strategy and its flagship initiative on "A Resource Efficient Europe"[1] set the EU on the
path to this transformation. The flagship called for a roadmap "to define
medium and long term objectives and means needed for achieving them". This
Roadmap builds upon and complements
the other initiatives under the flagship, in particular the policy achievements
towards a low carbon economy, and
takes into account progress made on the 2005 Thematic Strategy on the
Sustainable Use of Natural Resources[2]
and the EU's strategy on sustainable development. The Roadmap should also be seen in the context of worldwide
efforts to achieve a transition towards a green economy[3]. It draws extensively on a
range of sources which are referenced in the accompanying Staff Working
Document, including the European Environment Agency's report on the state and
outlook for the European Environment.

2.
Making Europe resource efficient

Designing the
Roadmap

The Vision: By 2050 the EU's economy has grown
in a way that respects resource constraints and planetary boundaries, thus
contributing to global economic transformation. Our economy is competitive,
inclusive and provides a high standard of living with much lower environmental
impacts. All resources are sustainably managed, from raw materials to energy,
water, air, land and soil. Climate change milestones have been reached, while
biodiversity and the ecosystem services it underpins have been protected,
valued and substantially restored.

Resource efficient development
is the route to this vision. It allows the economy to create more with less,
delivering greater value with less input, using resources in a sustainable way
and minimising their impacts on the environment. In practice, this requires
that the stocks of all environmental assets from which the EU benefits or
sources its global supplies are secure and managed within their maximum
sustainable yields. It will also require that residual waste is close to zero
and that ecosystems have been restored, and systemic risks to the economy from
the environment have been understood and avoided. A new wave of innovation will
be required.

This Roadmap sets the milestones, which illustrate what
will be needed to put us on a path to resource efficient and sustainable growth.
Each section then describes the actions that are needed in the short term to
start off this process.

The Roadmap provides a framework explaining how policies
interrelate and build on each other in which future actions can be designed and
implemented coherently. The
inter-linkages between key sectors and resources and their associated EU policy
initiatives are outlined in the Annex Table. Impact assessments will be prepared for all significant actions and any potential targets before
detailed proposals are presented[4].

Making and
measuring progress

Robust
and easily understandable indicators will be necessary to provide signals and measure
progress in improving resource efficiency.

This
Roadmap proposes a new pathway to action on resource efficiency, with a process
involving all key stakeholders, to discuss and agree on indicators and targets by the end of 2013.
This process is described in more detail in chapter 6.

In
order to launch this process, two levels of indicators are provisionally formulated[5]:

(1)
A provisional lead indicator
- "Resource Productivity" - to measure the principal objective of
this Roadmap, of improving economic performance while reducing pressure on
natural resources;

(2)
A series of complementary
indicators on key natural resources such as water, land, materials and carbon, that
will take account of the EU’s global consumption of these resources.

Overcoming the barriers

The EU and its Member States should strive to remove
barriers that hold back resource efficiency and so create the right set of
incentives for production and consumption decisions. This will require:

–
Addressing markets and
prices, taxes and subsidies that do not reflect the real costs of resource use
and lock the economy into an unsustainable path;

–
Encouraging more long-term innovative
thinking in business, finance and politics that leads to the uptake of new
sustainable practices and stimulates breakthroughs in innovation, and develops
forward thinking, cost effective regulation;

–
Carrying out the research to
fill the gaps in our knowledge and skills and provide the right information and
training;

–
Dealing with international
competitiveness concerns, and seeking to get a
consensus with international partners to move in a
similar direction.

3.
Transforming the Economy

Transforming the economy onto a
resource-efficient path will bring increased competitiveness and new sources of
growth and jobs through cost savings from improved efficiency,
commercialisation of innovations and better management of resources over their
whole life cycle. This requires policies that recognise the interdependencies
between the economy, well-being and natural capital and seeks to remove
barriers to improved resource efficiency, whilst providing a fair, flexible,
predictable and coherent basis for business to operate.

Source: European
Environment Agency

3.1.
Sustainable consumption and production

3.1.1. Improving products and changing consumption patterns

Changing the consumption patterns of private and public
purchasers will help drive resource efficiency and can also frequently generate
direct net cost savings. In turn it can help increase demand for more resource
efficient services and products. Accurate information, based on the life-cycle
impacts and costs of resource use, is needed to help guide consumption
decisions. Consumers can save costs by avoiding waste themselves, and buying
products that last, or that can be easily repaired or recycled. New
entrepreneurial models, where products are leased rather than bought, can satisfy consumer needs with less life-cycle
resource use.

The internal market and market based instruments have an
important role in setting the framework for markets to reward greener products.
An approach using both voluntary and mandatory measures – as in the EU’s Lead
Market Initiatives and the Ecodesign Directive – should be considered for a
wider range of products and services and include more resource relevant
criteria.

However, it has been shown that in some cases, cost savings
made from improving the efficiency of a technology can actually induce people
to consume more. This phenomenon, known as a "rebound effect" must be
anticipated, and accounted for, in developing policy and setting targets.

Milestone: By
2020, citizens and public authorities have the right incentives to choose the
most resource efficient products and services, through appropriate price
signals and clear environmental information. Their purchasing choices will stimulate
companies to innovate and to supply more resource efficient goods and services.
Minimum environmental performance standards are set to remove the least
resource efficient and most polluting products from the market. Consumer
demand is high for more sustainable products and services.

3.1.2. Boosting efficient production

Europe has the world's
highest net imports of resources per person, and its open economy relies
heavily on imported raw materials and energy. Secure access to resources has
become an increasingly strategic economic issue, while possible negative social
and environmental impacts on third countries constitute an additional concern.
In 2007 the total amount of material directly used in the EU economy was more
than 8 billion tonnes. We could reduce that amount whilst increasing production
and competitiveness[6].
Moreover, Improving the re-use of raw materials through greater 'industrial
symbiosis' (where the waste of some firms is used as a resource for others)
across the EU could save €1.4bn a year and generate €1.6bn in sales[7].

Although many firms
have already taken action to improve their resource efficiency, much scope for
improvement remains. This applies especially to non-core business areas, for
example where energy or water efficiency is not central to the firm's activity.
Many fail to economise on longer-term resource use because of a short-term
horizon encouraged by current corporate reporting practices. Firms which are
already beginning to invest in resource efficiency need to benefit from
advances in knowledge and innovation.

Exchanging information
on routes to resource efficiency between partners in value chains and across
sectors, including SMEs, can prevent waste, boost innovation and create new
markets.

Avoiding, wherever possible, the use of
dangerous chemicals and promoting green chemistry can help protect key
resources like soil and water, and make others, like materials, safer, easier
and less costly to recycle and reuse. The approach to
chemicals management promoted by fully implementing REACH will help identify
opportunities for substituting dangerous chemicals with safer and
technologically and economically viable alternatives.

Milestone: By
2020, market and policy incentives that reward business investments in
efficiency are in place. These incentives have stimulated new innovations in
resource efficient production methods that are widely used. All companies, and
their investors, can measure and benchmark their lifecycle resource efficiency.
Economic growth and wellbeing is decoupled from resource inputs and come
primarily from increases in the value of products and associated services.

In order to
promote further sustainable consumption and production, the Commission will:

·
Strengthen the requirements
on Green Public Procurement (GPP) for products with significant environmental
impacts; assess where GPP could be linked to EU funded projects; and promote
joint procurement, and networks of public procurement officers in support of
GPP (in 2012);

·
Establish a common methodological
approach to enable Member States and the private sector to assess, display and
benchmark the environmental performance of products, services and companies
based on a comprehensive assessment of environmental impacts over the
life-cycle ('environmental footprint') (in 2012);

·
Address the environmental
footprint of products, building on an ongoing assessment due in 2012 and
following a consultation with stakeholders, including through setting
requirements under the Ecodesign directive, to boost the material resource
efficiency of products (e.g. reusability/recoverability/recyclability, recycled
content, durability), and through expanding the scope of the Ecodesign
directive to non-energy related products (in 2012);

·
Ensure better understanding
of consumer behaviour and provide better information on the environmental
footprints of products, including preventing the use of misleading claims, and
refining eco-labelling schemes (in 2012);

·
Support the networking and
exchange of best practice between agencies running schemes on resource
efficiency for SMEs (continuous).

Member States,
with the Commission should as of 2012, assess:

·
Options to increase market
rewards for genuinely environmentally friendly products;

·
Measures to extend producer
responsibility to the full life-cycle of the products they make (including via
new business models, through guidance on take-back and recycling schemes and
support for repair services);

·
Actions to optimise the
resource efficiency of packaging.

Member States
should:

·
Put in place incentives that
stimulate a large majority of companies to measure, benchmark and improve their
resource efficiency systematically (continuous);

·
Help companies work together
to make the best use of the waste and by-products they produce (e.g. by
exploiting industrial symbiosis) (continuous);

·
Ensure that advice and
support is available to help SMEs identify and improve their resource
efficiency and sustainable use of raw materials (continuous);

·
Work together with the
Commission to ensure that, by 2020, all relevant Substances of Very High
Concern are placed on the REACH Candidate List (continuous).

3.2.
Turning waste into a resource

Each year in the European Union we throw away 2.7 billion
tonnes of waste, 98 million tonnes of which is hazardous. On average only 40%
of our solid waste is re-used or recycled, the rest going to landfill or
incineration. Overall waste generation is stable in the EU, however, generation
of some waste streams like construction and demolition waste, to sewage sludge
and marine litter is still increasing. Waste electrical and electronic
equipment alone is expected to increase by roughly 11% between 2008 and 2014.

In some Member States more than 80% of waste is recycled,
indicating the possibilities of using waste as one of the EU’s key resources. Improving
waste management makes better use of resources and can open up new markets and
jobs, as well as encourage less dependence on imports of raw materials and
lower impacts on the environment.

If waste is to become a
resource to be fed back into the economy as a raw material, then much higher
priority needs to be given to re-use and recycling. A combination of policies
would help create a full recycling economy, such as product design integrating
a life-cycle approach, better cooperation along all market actors along the
value chain, better collection processes, appropriate regulatory framework, incentives
for waste prevention and recycling, as well as public investments in modern
facilities for waste treatment and high quality recycling.

Milestone: By 2020, waste is managed as a resource. Waste
generated per capita is in absolute decline. Recycling and re-use of waste are
economically attractive options for public and private actors due to widespread
separate collection and the development of functional markets for secondary raw
materials. More materials, including materials having a significant impact on
the environment and critical raw materials, are recycled. Waste legislation is
fully implemented. Illegal shipments of waste have been eradicated. Energy
recovery is limited to non recyclable materials, landfilling is virtually
eliminated and high quality recycling is ensured.

The Commission will:

·
Stimulate the secondary
materials market and demand for recycled materials through economic incentives
and developing end-of-waste criteria (in 2013/2014);

·
Review existing prevention,
re-use, recycling, recovery and landfill diversion targets to move towards an
economy based on re-use and recycling, with residual waste close to zero (in 2014);

·
Assess the introduction of
minimum recycled material rates, durability and re-usability criteria and
extensions of producer responsibility for key products (in 2012);

·
Assess areas where legislation on the various
waste streams could be aligned to improve coherence (in 2013/2014);

·
Continue working within the EU and with international partners to
eradicate illegal waste shipments with a special focus on hazardous waste;

·
Ensure that public funding
from the EU budget gives priority to activities higher up the waste hierarchy as
defined in the Waste Framework Directive (e.g. priority to recycling plants over
waste disposal) (in 2012/2013);

·
Facilitate the exchange of
best practice on collection and treatment of waste among Member States and develop measures to combat more effectively breaches of EU waste
rules (in 2013/2014).

Member States should:

·
ensure full implementation
of the EU waste acquis including minimum targets through their national waste
prevention and management strategies (continuous).

3.3.
Supporting research and innovation

The transition to a green and low-carbon
economy will require significant innovation, from small incremental changes to
major technological breakthroughs.

At the same time we need a more
comprehensive and credible knowledge base about how the natural systems react
to the different pressures we exert on them. Basic and applied research should
identify challenges and guide actions, including social sciences research to
develop our understanding of behaviour.

To trigger this push in research and
innovation, the right set of incentives needs to be in place so that the private
sector invests more in resource efficient research and innovation. Demand side
measures will help create incentives for green innovation by building markets.
Clear framework conditions are needed to increase investor certainty and better
access to finance for companies making green investments that are seen as riskier
or that have longer payback times.

Milestone: By
2020, scientific breakthroughs and sustained innovation efforts have dramatically
improved how we understand, manage, reduce the use, reuse, recycle, substitute
and safeguard and value resources. This has been made possible by substantial
increases in investment, coherence in addressing the societal challenge of
resource efficiency, climate change and resilience, and in gains from smart
specialization and cooperation within the European research area.

Member
States with the Commission will:

·
Establish an appropriate framework and set of
incentives to boost private sector investment into research and innovation for
resource efficiency (continuous).

The
Commission will:

·
Develop 'Innovation Partnerships' for meeting
resource efficiency goals, e.g. on water, raw materials and productive and sustainable
agriculture (from 2011);

·
Develop Joint Technology
Initiatives or other forms of private-public partnerships, as well as Joint
Programming Initiatives that pool national research efforts in areas of
resource efficiency (continuous);

·
Tackle barriers to
eco-innovation (in 2011);

·
Focus Union research funding (EU Horizon 2020)
on key resource efficiency objectives, supporting innovative solutions for: sustainable
energy, transport and construction; management of natural resources;
preservation of ecosystem services and biodiversity; resource efficient
agriculture and the wider bio-economy; environmentally friendly material
extraction; recycling, re-use, substitution of environmental impacting or rare
materials, smarter design, green chemistry and lower impact, biodegradable
plastics.

Member
States should:

·
focus public research funding on key resource
efficiency objectives (continuous).

3.4.
Environmentally harmful subsidies and getting
the prices right

Market prices are the primary
guide for purchasing choices and investment decisions but they do
not necessarily reflect the true costs of using resources and their
environmental impacts. In addition, prices may be deliberately distorted by
Environmentally Harmful Subsidies (EHS) by governments which confer an
advantage on certain consumers, users or producers, in order to supplement
their income or lower their costs, but in doing so, discriminate against sound
environmental practice[8].

3.4.1. Phasing out
inefficient subsidies

The scale of subsidies
with potential negative impacts on the environment, notably in the areas of
fossil fuels, transport and water, are estimated to be worth a global total of
$1 trillion per year. EHS lead to higher levels of waste, emissions, resource
extraction, or to negative impacts on biodiversity. They can lock in
inefficient practices and hinder businesses from investing in green
technologies. Such subsidies take different forms, with tax reductions or exemptions
being one example.

Moving away from EHS
can deliver economic, social and environmental benefits, and allow for improved
competitiveness. Member States have already been invited to eliminate EHS in
the 2011 Annual Growth Survey[9]
in order to support budget consolidation. In the process of EHS removal, alternative
mitigating arrangements may be necessary for the most affected economic sectors,
regions and workers, or for dealing with energy poverty, and the impact of
possible displacement of production to other countries needs to be considered.

Milestone: By
2020 EHS will be phased out, with due regard to the impact on people in need.

3.4.2. Getting the
prices right and reorienting the burden of taxation

The market already
gives signals for the scarcity of some resources by means of rising commodity
prices, and businesses increasingly face an urgent need to adjust in order to
preserve their competitiveness, especially in the international context.
However, the cost of externalities may still remain unaddressed, and for a
number of resources such signals may come too late to prevent their
unsustainable exploitation. The overall incidence of taxation often impacts
prices in ways that favour resource use rather than increased employment in the
economy.

Market based
instruments have a strong role to play in correcting market failures – for
example by introducing environmental taxes, charges, tradable permit schemes,
fiscal incentives for more environmentally-friendly consumption or other
instruments. New policies should help
to align the prices of resources that are not appropriately valued on the
market, such as water, clean air, ecosystems, biodiversity, and marine
resources. These may need to be part of a broader approach involving regulation
for example where resources are
common goods.

Shifting taxation away
from labour to boost employment and economic growth is already emphasised in
the Annual Growth Survey for 2011[10]
and in the European Council Conclusions from March 2011[11]. "Green tax reforms", which consist of increasing the share
of environmental taxes, while reducing others, have a role to play in this
context. Environmental taxation can also align
the efforts for fiscal consolidation with facilitating the restructuring
towards a resource efficient economy. Nonetheless, the average share of environmental taxation in total tax revenues in
the EU has generally been declining since 1999, reaching a level of 6.3% in
2009[12].

Some Member States have
achieved, through various steps of environmental tax reforms, a share of
environmental tax revenues in total taxes of more than 10%, while at the same
time preserving fiscal revenues and improving competitiveness and energy
efficiency. This demonstrates that it is possible to shift taxation onto
environmentally harmful activities within a sound economic framework. However,
in order to measure more effectively the shift in the price signals needed to
encourage greater investment in more efficient use of resources an additional
indicator may be needed, such as the effective tax rate on environmental
pollution or resource use.

Milestone: By
2020 a major shift from taxation of labour towards environmental taxation,
including through regular adjustments in real rates, will lead to a substantial
increase in the share of environmental taxes in public revenues, in line with the best practice of Member States.

In order to address the issues of
environmentally harmful subsidies and better price signals, the Commission
will:

·
Monitor via the European Semester Member States'
follow-up to country-specific recommendations on fiscal reform that favours a
shift from the taxation of labour to environmental impacts and the phasing out
of EHS from 2012;

·
Promote regular exchange of
best practices and peer reviews on the reform of EHS and on market based
instruments between the Member States, in particular under the Market Based
Instruments Forum and the Taxation Policy Group (continuous);

·
Assess how state aid for measures aiming at
increasing resource efficiency has been implemented and
to what extent resource efficiency objectives should be strengthened in the
revisions of the relevant state aid guidelines as of 2013;

·
Continue working on improving indicators on the
use of taxes on pollution and resources.

Member States should:

·
Identify the most significant EHS pursuant to
established methodologies (by 2012);

·
Prepare plans and timetables
to phase out EHS and report on these as part of their National Reform
Programmes (by 2012/2013);

·
Shift taxation away from
labour to environmental impacts (continuous);

·
Review their fiscal policies and instruments
with a view to supporting resource efficiency more effectively, and in this
context reflect on incentives to support consumer choices and producer action in
favour of resource efficiency (by 2013).

4.
Natural Capital and Ecosystem Services
4.1.
Ecosystem services

Our economic prosperity and wellbeing depend on our natural
capital, including ecosystems that provide us with a
flow of essential goods and services – from fertile soil to productive land and
seas, from fresh water and clean air to pollination, flood control and climate
regulation. Many of these ecosystem services are used almost as if their supply is unlimited. They are treated as "free" commodities, their economic
value is not properly accounted for on the market, and therefore they continue
to be overly depleted or polluted, threatening our long-term sustainability and
resilience to environmental shocks.

60% of the Earth’s ecosystem services have
been degraded in the last 50 years. In the EU, 88% of fish
stocks are fished beyond maximum sustainable yields and
only 11% of protected ecosystems are in a favourable state.

Ensuring a long-term supply of essential ecosystem goods and
services implies we must properly value out natural capital. Investing in
natural capital – like green infrastructure – often brings higher returns than
constructed or manufactured alternatives, with lower up-front costs.

Milestone: By
2020 natural capital and ecosystem services will be properly valued and
accounted for by public authorities and businesses.

The
Commission will:

·
Promote the use of innovative financial and
market-based instruments and explore their wider potential, including a possible establishment of a biodiversity financing facility and payments for ecosystems services, to
address challenges to ecosystems and biodiversity at
national, EU and international level, in particular in
cooperation with the European Investment Bank and through Public Private
Partnerships (continuous);

·
Put forward proposals to
foster investments in natural capital, to seize the full growth and innovation
potential of Green Infrastructure and the 'restoration economy', through a
Communication on Green Infrastructure (in 2012), and a "No Net Loss"
initiative (in 2015).

Member
States, with the Commission, should:

·
Map the state of ecosystems
and their services (by 2014);

·
Assess their economic value,
and promote the integration of these values into accounting and reporting
systems at EU and national level (continuous);

·
Work with key stakeholders
to encourage businesses to assess their dependency on ecosystem services
building upon the EU Business & Biodiversity Platform (continuous).

4.2.
Biodiversity

Biodiversity underpins many of our
ecosystems and is vital to their resilience. Its loss can weaken an ecosystem,
compromising the delivery of ecosystem services and making it more vulnerable
to environmental shocks. Restoring degraded ecosystems is costly, and in some
cases, change can become irreversible.

It has been estimated that by 2050, the global business opportunities dependent on biodiversity
and the ecosystem services it underpins, could have a value of between $800-2.300
billion per year. In practice however, at the operational level, the value of
biodiversity is only starting to be taken into account in decision making. If
biodiversity is to be conserved this has to become common practice.

The new 2020 EU
Biodiversity Strategy sets out the main policy tools for achieving this
objective, and for reversing the trends in loss of biodiversity we have seen in
recent generations.

Milestone: By
2020 the loss of biodiversity in the EU and the degradation of ecosystem
services will be halted and, as far as feasible, biodiversity will be restored.

The Commission will:

·
Significantly strengthen its
efforts to integrate biodiversity protection and ecosystem actions in other
Community policies with a particular focus on agriculture and fisheries
(continuous).

Member States, with the
Commission, will:

·
Work towards the objectives
of the Biodiversity Strategy by integrating the value of ecosystem services
into policymaking (continuous).

4.3.
Minerals and metals

Improved efficiency of natural resources
such as metals and minerals are essential aspects of resource efficiency. Their
specific risks, including security of supply, are addressed in the Raw
Materials Initiative, as well as the climate and energy policies under the
Resource Efficiency Flagship, so they will not be treated extensively in this
section, although the interaction between their use and other resources is
recognised.

As we move towards a genuinely consumption based, sustainable materials management or a
"circular economy", where waste becomes a resource, a more efficient use of minerals and metals will result. The steps
outlined in section 3 of this roadmap will have a direct impact on the
efficiency of minerals and metal resources, through measures to take life-cycle
impacts more into account, to avoid waste, reuse and recycle more, improved
research and innovation and other measures to improve market structures.

4.4.
Water

Water is a vital resource for human health and
an essential input for agriculture, tourism, industry, transport and energy.
Reduced water availability has a critical impact on hydropower and cooling of nuclear
and thermal power stations.

Good environmental status and citizens'
health depend on the quality and availability of fresh water. However, they are
decreasing. Climate change is projected to increase water
shortages as well as the intensity and frequency of floods. Many European river
basins and waters have been altered by water abstraction, land drainage and
dams, leading often to poor water quality with major adverse ecological effects, possible health impacts and leaving limited space for natural habitats.

20% to 40% of Europe’s water is wasted and
water efficiency could be improved by 40% through technological improvements
alone[13].
An improved approach for a sustainable management of water resources requires
close coordination with agriculture, transport, regional development and energy
policies as well as effective and fair water pricing as required by the Water
Framework Directive (WFD). Changes in ecosystems, land use, in production and
water consumption and re-use patterns could cost-effectively reduce scarcity
and ensure water quality.

Milestone:
By 2020, all WFD River Basin Management Plans (RBMPs) have long been
implemented. Good status – quality, quantity and use - of waters was attained
in all EU river basins in 2015. The impacts of droughts and floods are
minimised, with adapted crops, increased water retention in soils and efficient
irrigation. Alternative water supply options are only relied upon when all
cheaper savings opportunities are taken. Water abstraction should stay below
20% of available renewable water resources.

The Commission will: · Further integrate resource-efficiency considerations into water policy, with a Blueprint to safeguard Europe's water defining a cost-effective strategy (on-going); · Assess Member States' RBMPs, with a view to identifying areas where additional action is needed (in 2011); · Assess and propose (in 2012): – Water efficiency targets and improved water efficiency measures (e.g. smart metering, mandatory requirements on water using devices; guidelines for water re-use, reduction of leakage in water infrastructure, water saving in irrigation, etc.); – Better demand management through economic instruments (pricing, water allocation) and use of labelling and certification schemes measuring life-cycle impact and virtual water content of products; – A candidate European Innovation Partnership on water. Member States should: · Set water efficiency targets for 2020 at River Basin level, with appropriate complementary measures, based on a common EU methodology that takes into account the variety of situations across economic sectors and geographic areas

4.5.
Air

Clean air is a precious
resource. Several air quality standards are widely exceeded in the EU's most
densely populated areas, especially from the most problematic pollutants such
as particulate matter, ground-level ozone, and nitrogen dioxide. Despite
significant efforts to reduce polluting emissions, current
concentrations of fine particles cause 500 000 premature deaths each year[14] in the EU and
immediate neighbourhood. Other studies have shown that the number of working
days lost due to air pollution induced illnesses is higher than the working
days required to pay for additional pollutant abatement measures.

Significantly, ecosystems
and agriculture also suffer damage from airborne impacts such as acidification,
eutrophication and ozone damage to vegetation. The annual economic cost in 2020
has been estimated at €537 bn[15].

Better implementation
of existing legislation and new, science-based standards would help address
these problems and steer innovation. With appropriate lead-times, these can
ensure air quality benefits from transition to a low-carbon economy, and by other actions in this Roadmap, for example
through reductions in waste, through more efficient production methods, as well
as action in agricultural policy and the transport sector.

Milestone: By
2020, the EU's interim air quality standards will have been met, including in
urban hot spots, and those standards will have been updated and additional
measures defined to further close the gap to the ultimate goal of achieving
levels of air quality that do not cause significant impacts on health and the
environment.

The Commission will: · Undertake a comprehensive review of all EU air pollution policies (by 2013); · Propose an upgraded strategy looking beyond 2020, assessing the scope for the use of air quality and emission standards and further measures to reduce emissions from key sources (in 2013); · Support implementation of existing measures to help resolve persistent air quality problems. Member States should: · Step up their implementation of EU air quality legislation (continuous).

4.6.
Land and soils

In the EU, more
than 1,000 km² are subject to 'land take' every year for housing, industry,
roads or recreational purposes. About half of this surface is actually 'sealed'[16]. The availability of
infrastructure varies considerably between regions, but in aggregate, every ten
years we pave over a surface area equivalent to Cyprus. If we are to reach the
state of no net land take by 2050, following a linear path, we would need to
reduce land take to an average of 800 km² per year in the period 2000-2020. In
many regions soil is irreversibly eroded, or has a low content of organic
matter. Soil contamination is also a serious problem.

The use of land is nearly always a trade-off between
various social, economic and environmental needs (e.g. housing, transport
infrastructure, energy production, agriculture, nature protection). Decisions on
land use are long term commitments which are difficult or costly to reverse. At the moment, these decisions are often taken without proper prior
analysis of such impacts, for example through a Strategic Environmental
Assessment. The EU agricultural, energy, transport
and cohesion policy reforms will provide the opportunity to set the framework
and the right incentives for public authorities and land owners to achieve this
objective.

Milestone: By
2020, EU policies take into account their direct and indirect impact on land
use in the EU and globally, and the rate of land take is on track with an aim to
achieve no net land take by 2050; soil erosion is reduced and the soil organic
matter increased, with remedial work on contaminated sites well underway.

The
Commission will:

·
Further develop the scientific knowledge-base on
biotic material, land-use effects and trends, and spatial planning, including
impacts at global level and effects on trading partners, and highlight best practices in the Member States, leading to a Communication
on land use (in 2014);

·
Address the indirect land use change resulting
notably from the renewable energy policy (continuous);

·
Publish guidelines on best practice to limit,
mitigate or compensate soil sealing (in 2012);

·
Include broader resource efficiency
considerations in the review of the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)
Directive (in 2012).

·
Propose a candidate European Innovation
Partnership (in 2011) on agricultural productivity and sustainability aiming,
inter alia, at securing soil functionality at a satisfactory level (by 2020).

Member States should:

·
Better integrate direct and indirect land-use
and its environmental impacts in their decision making and limit land take and
soil sealing to the extent possible (continuous);

·
Implement the actions needed for reducing
erosion and increasing soil organic matter (continuous);

·
Set up an inventory of contaminated
sites, and a schedule for remedial work (by 2015).

4.7.
Marine resources

The marine environment holds economic
opportunities in a wide range of sectors such as minerals extraction, pharmaceuticals,
biotechnology and energy. The marine environment also provides key ecosystem
services like the natural regulatory functions that help combat climate change or
slow coastal erosion. Pressures on these systems, including from the discharge
into the sea of pollutants in freshwater, are still severe, even if in some
cases declining. There is a lack of coherent management of sea space which is
already affecting our possibilities to benefit from maritime activities. The
use of spatial planning instruments in marine areas would contribute to
resource efficiency.

The depletion of fish
stocks has severe economic and social consequences for coastal zones and
contributes to other biodiversity loss by disrupting systems, while marine pollution
and climate change pose other challenges (e.g. acidification). The EU Common Fisheries Policy and the EU Integrated Maritime
Policy are putting sustainability at the heart of their aims, in order to
ensure an efficient and sustainable use of marine resources by all operators of
the value chain.

Over 1
million birds and 100,000 marine mammals and sea turtles die each year as a
result of plastic waste and other marine debris. Factors such as marine litter
and urban waste water treatment seriously aggravate pollution in some seas
around Europe. In order to address such pressures, the Marine Strategy
Framework Directive provides for achieving good environmental status in marine
waters.

Milestone: By 2020, good
environmental status of all EU marine waters is achieved, and by 2015 fishing
is within maximum sustainable yields.

The Commission will: · Within the context of the latest Commission proposals for the reform of the Common Fisheries Policy, aim to ensure sustainable management of fishery resources; · Make further proposals to phase out all fisheries subsidies that could be environmentally harmful; · Contribute to safeguarding natural coastal and marine capital by proposing policy measures on management and planning (in 2012) as well as continued support for knowledge and demonstration projects; · Promote eco-system based strategies and integrate climate risk into maritime activities (Communication "Climate change adaptation in the Coast and the Sea" 2012); · Support the sustainable use of marine resources, and identify innovative business opportunities in the maritime and coastal economy (Communication on "Blue Growth", 2012). · Contribute to marine litter strategies in all four EU marine regions in close collaboration with coastal Member States or in the respective Regional Seas Convention (in 2012); · Support Member States by developing measures to achieve good environmental status in marine waters by 2020 and to establish an extensive network of protected areas (in 2020). Member States should: · Implement the Marine Strategy Framework Directive and designate marine protected areas.

5.
Key sectors

In industrialized countries nutrition, housing and mobility are
typically responsible for 70-80% of all environmental impacts. These sectors
are also key to addressing the challenges in energy and climate change dealt
with in complementary long term strategies, which combine together with the
measures in this paper to maximise synergies under the Resource Efficiency
Flagship[17].

5.1.
Addressing food

The food and drink value chain in the EU causes 17% of our direct greenhouse
gas emissions and 28% of material resource use, with our consumption patterns
having global impacts, in particular related to the consumption of animal
proteins. It is a major user of high-quality water, which is essential for its
success. However, in the EU alone, we waste 90 million tonnes of food every
year or 180 kg per person. Much of this is food, which is still suitable for
human consumption.

A
combined effort by farmers, the food industry, retailers and consumers through resource-efficient production techniques,
sustainable food choices (in line with the WHO recommendations on the amount of animal proteins, including meat and dairy products, consumed per
person) and reduced food waste can
contribute to improving resource efficiency and food security at a global
level.

The Commission
has proposed in its Budget for Europe 2020 communication the measures that a
reformed Common Agricultural Policy will need to undertake to become more
resource-efficient[18].
An additional issue for long term global food security is the sustainable
supply of phosphorus, a key resource for soil fertilisation that cannot be
substituted. Further research is needed in order to identify how improvements
to the fertiliser, food production and bio-waste issues could reduce our
dependence on mined phosphate.

Milestone: By 2020, incentives to
healthier and more sustainable food production and consumption will be widespread
and will have driven a 20% reduction in the food chain's resource inputs.
Disposal of edible food waste should have been halved in the EU.

The Commission will:

·
Further assess how best to limit waste throughout
the food supply chain, and consider ways to lower the environmental impact of
food production and consumption patterns (Communication on sustainable food, by
2013);

·
Develop a methodology for sustainability
criteria for key food commodities (by 2014);

·
Further assess the security of supply of
phosphorus and potential actions towards its sustainable use (Green Paper on
sustainable use of phosphorus by 2012).

Member States
are invited to:

·
Address food wastage in their National Waste
Prevention Programs (2013).

5.2.
Improving buildings

Better construction and use of buildings in the
EU would influence 42% of our final energy consumption, about 35% of our
greenhouse gas emissions[19]
and more than 50% of all extracted materials; it could also help us save up to
30% water[20].
Existing policies for promoting energy efficiency and renewable energy
use in buildings therefore need to be further strengthened and complemented
with policies for resource efficiency, which look at a wider range of
environmental impacts across the life-cycle of buildings and infrastructure.
Life-time costs of buildings should increasingly be considered rather than just
the initial costs, including construction and demolition waste. Better infrastructure planning is a prerequisite in achieving
resource efficiency of buildings and also mobility.

Significant
improvements in resource and energy use during the life-cycle – with improved sustainable
materials, higher waste recycling, and improved design – will contribute to a
competitive construction sector and the development of a resource efficient
building stock. This requires the active engagement of the whole value chain in
the construction sector. Specific policies are needed to stimulate SMEs, which
make up the vast majority of construction companies – to train and invest in
resource efficient building methods and practices.

Milestone: By 2020 the renovation and
construction of buildings and infrastructure will be made to high resource
efficiency levels. The Life-cycle approach will be widely applied; all new
buildings will be nearly zero-energy[21]and
highly material efficient, and policies for renovating the existing building
stock will be in place[22]
so that it is cost-efficiently refurbished at a rate of 2% per year. 70% of non-hazardous construction and demolition waste
will be recycled[23].

The Commission, with Member States, will:

·
Assess how to support skills
investment plans, apprentice schemes and communication on the best resource
efficiency practices in the industry (continuous);

·
Take measures, using an 'SME
test' where appropriate, to stimulate demand and uptake of resource efficient
building practices through life-cycle costing and suitable financing
arrangements; to further widen the
scope of the Eurocodes to design criteria related to sustainability; to develop incentives to reward resource
efficient buildings, and to promote the sustainable use of wood in
construction, (Communication on the sustainable competitiveness of the
construction sector, 2011, Communication
on sustainable buildings, 2013);

·
Asses how best to encourage
private sector innovation in construction (continuous).

5.3.
Ensuring efficient mobility

A modern, resource efficient mobility
system, serving both passengers and freight can contribute significantly to
competitiveness and sustainability. The Transport White Paper[24] puts forward a wide range of
options for pursing the required holistic transport policy.

Milestone: By 2020 overall efficiency in the transport
sector will deliver greater value with optimal use of resources like raw
materials, energy, and land, and reduced impacts on climate change, air
pollution, noise, health, accidents, biodiversity and ecosystem degradation. Transport
will use less and cleaner energy, better exploit a modern infrastructure and
reduce its negative impact on the environment and key natural assets like
water, land and ecosystems. There will be on average a
1% yearly reduction, beginning in 2012, in transport GHG emissions.

The Commission will ensure that
the initiatives in the Transport White Paper are implemented consistently with
resource efficiency objectives, particularly by moving towards internalisation
of external costs.

6.
Governance and monitoring

Transforming the EU into
a more resource efficient economy will require concerted action across a wide
range of policies. The Commission will launch a joint effort with stakeholders
to work on defining the right indicators and targets for guiding actions and monitoring
progress. These will only have the transformational effect that is required if
they play their full part in the Europe 2020 Strategy, with resource efficiency
integrated into the European Semester on economic policy coordination.

6.1.
New pathways to action on resource efficiency

Enhancing dialogue: Policy makers, at EU, Member State and regional level,
need to engage in active discussion with business and civil society about the
policy conditions necessary to overcome the barriers to resource efficiency.

Investing in the
transition: Resource efficiency
can reduce costs, but often requires initial investments. UNEP estimate that
the annual financing needs for making the world economy more resource efficient
are between US$1.05-2.59 trillion[25],
mainly from private sources. This will require not only spending for green
solutions, but greening of all public and private investments. The proposal for
a Multiannual Financial Framework 2014-2020 has already made major steps
towards integrating resource efficiency in the EU budget. The rapid growth of
global financing for clean energy shows how this shift in mindset is possible.
However, unfamiliarity of financiers with risks and returns on investments in
resource efficiency presents an obstacle to investment, uncertainty on policy
direction and credibility adds financial risk, and the longer-term investments
are often not favoured by the financial markets geared to short-term
performance.

Developing indicators and potential targets: Setting indicators and defining a process for broad resource
efficiency targets will help trace the path to the 2050 resource efficiency
vision: public policy can be better designed to take into account the costs and
benefits of using resources more efficiently and the private sector will
benefit from better signals for their investment plans, the necessary predictability
and transparency to take long-term decisions.

The sustainable growth objective of the
Europe 2020 Strategy sets specific targets related to green house gas
emissions, energy efficiency and renewable energy, which are relevant for
achieving the resource efficiency objectives. Achieving these targets is vital
for protecting natural resources, and action in this Roadmap will also contribute
to reaching them. However, they do not capture some important adverse
consequences to our economy, health and quality of life, for example factors
such as inefficient land use, low water quality and availability, waste, air
pollution, and losses of ecosystem services, fish stocks and biodiversity. Taking
these into account would reinforce exploiting new sources of sustainable growth
and strengthening competitiveness in the longer term.

Important progress is already being made to
integrate environmental economic and social accounting systems, but there are
several competing ideas on what indicators need to be used, improved or
developed to guide better policy or investment decisions. Such indicators will
need to be robust, easily understandable and widely
accepted in order to continuously measure progress in improving resource
efficiency. This is why the Commission proposes to engage with all key
stakeholders to develop such indicators and potential targets.

However, recognizing the need to start measuring
progress immediately, the Commission proposes using, as a provisional lead indicator,
resource productivity, measured by the ratio of GDP to Domestic Material
Consumption (expressed in Euro/tonne). A higher ratio would indicate better
performance, with growth consuming relatively fewer resources[26]. This, however, only captures
the material resources aspects and does not deal with other resources or the potential
shift of burden across countries.

Because this
provisional lead indicator only gives a partial picture, it should be
complemented by a 'dashboard' of indicators on water, land, materials
and carbon and indicators that measure environmental impacts and our natural
capital or ecosystems as well as seeking to take into account the global
aspects of EU consumption. On a third level, thematic indicators will be used
to monitor progress towards existing targets in other sectors, as detailed in the
Staff Working Paper accompanying this Roadmap.

Milestone: By 2020 stakeholders at
all levels will be mobilised to ensure that policy, financing, investment, research
and innovation are coherent and mutually reinforcing. Ambitious resource
efficiency targets and robust, timely indicators will guide public and private
decision-makers in the transformation of the economy towards greater resource
efficiency.

The Commission, with Member States, will:

·
Integrate resource efficiency considerations in
the European Semester from 2012, focusing on prioritising sustainable growth
friendly measures;

·
Bring together business,
scientists, NGOs, local and national authorities to examine the opportunities
and the challenges and recommend new pathways to action on sustainable
resource-efficient growth (in 2012);

·
Reach broad agreement with
these stakeholders on how to measure progress and to set the targets needed to
meet the challenge (by 2013).

The Commission will:

·
Launch an "EU Resource
Efficiency Transition Platform"(2012), building upon the work of existing
platforms;

·
Set up a Resource Efficiency
Finance Round Table, including representatives from private and institutional
banks (such as the EIB, EBRD), insurance companies and venture capital
companies, to identify opportunities to develop adapted finance and use
innovative financial instruments for resource-efficiency (2012);

·
Develop an EU Skills Panorama and a European Sector Council on skills for green
and greener jobs;

·
Continue work on indicators, including the
quality of the data, taking stock of existing assessment frameworks, such as
iGrowGreen, with a view to inclusion in the mid-term review of the Europe 2020
strategy (2013);

·
Propose a new lead indicator on natural capital
and environmental impacts of resource use (end of 2013);

·
Continue its efforts under the "GDP and
beyond" road map to measure societal and economic progress more
comprehensively, inter alia by continuing the development of the system of
environmental accounts, further integrating environmental externalities into
national accounting and developing a composite index on environmental
pressures;

·
Consider how best to include resource efficiency
considerations in the impact assessments of future policy proposals.

Member States should:

·
Develop or strengthen
existing national resource efficiency strategies, and mainstream these into
national policies for growth and jobs (by 2013);

·
Report their progress on
resource efficiency as part of their national reform programmes.

6.2.
Supporting resource efficiency internationally

A number of
countries are implementing policies to reap the gains of greater resource
efficiency, not only within the EU but also Japan, Korea, the United States,
China and others. There is also a strong interest in
dialogue and cooperation on these issues in EU's neighbouring countries. Such initiatives can be seen in the context of efforts around the
globe to promote a transition towards a green economy. The EU can learn from
experience of others, and participates actively in helping to influence the
path that our partner countries take, specifically the
enlargement countries who are invited to start aligning their policies.

As a basis for further discussion at the June 2012 Rio+20
Conference, the European Commission has recently proposed a wide range of possible
actions, including new international initiatives on water, energy, agriculture,
land use, forests, chemicals and marine resources, skills training programmes,
mobilising private and public financing and investment, as well as moving
towards a more effective global, multilateral governance system[27].

Milestone: By 2020 resource efficiency will be a shared
objective of the international community, and progress will have been made
towards it based on the approaches agreed in Rio.

The Commission, with Member States will
(continuous):

·
Promote a successful outcome
of the RIO+20 summit in 2012 and concrete progress towards the green economy
and a more efficient use of natural resources;

·
Improve dialogue with strategic partner
countries in order to exchange experience and good practice on resource
efficiency;

·
Undertake joint initiatives with candidate
countries, potential candidates and other neighbours, who share with us many
environmental resources;

·
Support the conclusion and effective
implementation of international agreements to make global consumption and
production patterns more sustainable;

·
Use development aid to support efforts by less
developed countries to improve resource efficiency in the context of
sustainable development and poverty eradication;

·
Cooperate with international partners on
research and innovation on resource efficiency;

·
Work towards stronger multilateral mechanisms
for a global governance of public goods.

6.3.
Improving the delivery of benefits from EU environmental
measures

Progress on resource efficiency depends on making
improvements in the way our natural resources and ecosystems are managed. There
are still important gaps in the performance of Member States in implementing
measures, especially in nature conservation, waste and water management. The costs of not implementing current
legislation are estimated around €50 billion per year[28].

Milestone: By 2020 the benefits from EU
environmental legislation will be fully delivered.

The Commission will:

·
Propose measures to enhance
knowledge, raise awareness and better mobilise key actors in order to improve
delivery of environmental measures throughout the EU.

The Member States should:

·
Address gaps in their
performance in delivering the benefits from EU legislation.

7.
Conclusion

Previous patterns of growth
have brought increased prosperity, but through
intensive and often inefficient use
of resources. The role of biodiversity, ecosystems and their services is
largely undervalued, the costs of waste are often not reflected in prices,
current markets and public policies cannot fully deal with competing demands on
strategic resources such as minerals, land, water and biomass. This calls for a coherent and integrated response over a wide range of
policies in order to deal with expected resource constraints and to
sustain our prosperity in the long run.

The present road map is not the ultimate response to all
challenges. It is a first step towards designing a coherent action framework
that cuts across different policy areas and sectors. Its objective is to provide
a stable perspective for transforming the economy. The Commission will prepare
policy and legislative proposals to implement this Roadmap. Without the
engagement of other public and private actors we will not achieve our resource
efficiency objectives.

The Commission invites
the Council, the European Parliament, the European Economic and Social
Committee and the Committee of the Regions to endorse this roadmap and
contribute to the further development of the EU's actions to achieve a
resource-efficient Europe.

Annex: Resource
efficiency – the interlinks between sectors and resources, and EU policy
initiatives

Resource/ sector || Fossil fuels || Materials and minerals || Water || Air || Land || Soils || Ecosystems: Biodiversity || Marine resources || Waste || EU Policy Initiatives

Circular Economy || Reduce, reuse, recycle, substitute, safeguard, value || Review of SCP (2012)

Energy || Reduce fossil fuels use via: -increased energy efficiency (20% by 2020); -substituting for renewable resources (20% by 2020, and 10% in transport). || -Ensure security of supply of critical raw materials (for renewables and electrification) -Reduce energy intensity of materials extraction, production & consumption. || -Use efficiently as renewable energy source; -Reduce cooling needs of power plants; -Reduce energy intensity of water treatment; -Reduce use of hot water via better appliances & water infrastructure. || -Reduce pollution with harmful substances, in particular via reduced use of fossil fuels; -20% reduction of GHG emissions by 2020 (30% if the conditions are right); - 80-95% GHG emission reduction by 2050. || -Reduce land take for biofuels; -Optimise energy infrastructure. || -Prevent soil damage by SO2 and NOx emissions; -Mitigate soil impacts of new infrastructure/ energy solutions; -Preserve peatlands. || -Reduce acidification via reduced fossil fuels use; -Avoid ecosystem damage from energy carriers extraction/ exploitation. || -Use as a renewable energy source; -Ensure sustainable use of algae for biofuels; -Prevent risks of oil spills & disasters; - Reduce acidification resulting from GHG emissions. || -Ensure energy recovery of non-recyclable waste; -Reduce energy intensity of waste treatment; - Increase use of biodegradable waste for bioenergy and bioproducts. || -Energy 2020: A strategy for competitive, sustainable and secure energy (2011) - Strategic Energy Technology Plan for Europe; -Energy infrastructure priorities for 2020 and beyond - A Blueprint for an integrated European energy network (2011) -European Energy Efficiency Plan 2020 (2011) -Revision of the Energy Taxation Directive (2011) -Energy infrastructure package (2011) -Energy Roadmap 2050 (2011) -Smart grids (2011) -Security of energy supply and international cooperation (2011)

Food || -Reduce fossil fuels use via-improved energy efficiency of food production; -Avoid adverse impacts from the substitution of fossil fuels with biofuels. || -Optimise use of minerals & materials (eg phosphorous); -Improve packaging for better preservation & recyclability. || -Optimize water use in agriculture; -Prevent flooding & droughts, i.e. by fighting climate change; -Ensure clean water availability for quality products; -Avoid pollution from fertilizers and pesticides. || -Reduce GHG emissions; -Reduce SO2 & NOx emissions. || -Optimise land use to reconcile with other uses; -Use taken fertile land for agriculture; -Reduce land take (e.g. via optimal animal protein intake). || - Reverse soil loss; -Restore organic matter content in soils; -Prevent soil damage by SO2 and NOx emissions; -Avoid pollution from fertilizers and pesticides. || -Restore and preserve ecosystems to ensure pollination, water retention, etc.; -Avoid eutrophication from fertilizers and reduce the use of pesticides; - Increase biodiversity through good farming practices.. || -Restore fish stocks and eliminate by-catch and discards; -Eliminate destructive fishing techniques; -Develop sustainable aquaculture; -Reduce pollution of coastal areas from fertilizers - Avoid marine litter. || -Reduce food waste; -Use recyclable/ biodegradable packaging; -develop composting of biowaste. || -CAP Reform (2011) -Proposal for an Innovation. partnership on agricultural productivity and sustainability (2011) -Green Paper on phosphorous (2012) -Communication on sustainable food (2013)

Buildings || -Reduce fossil fuels use via better energy efficiency and renewable energy use in buildings; -Build zero energy buildings and increase the renovation rate of existing buildings. || -Optimise material use; -Use sustainable materials. || -Improve water efficiency of buildings and appliances || -Reduce GHG emissions from buildings; -Improve indoor air quality; || -Avoid additional land take (e.g. for urban sprawl); -Remediate contaminated sites. || -Avoid urban sprawl on fertile soil; - Minimize soil sealing || -Ensure sufficient and connected green spaces as part of green infrastructures. || -Reduce acidification resulting from GHG emissions. || -Recycle construction and demolition waste (70% till 2020). || -Strategy for the sustainable competitiveness of the EU construction sector (2011) -Communication on sustainable buildings (2013) -Initiative on water efficiency in buildings (2012)

Mobility || -Reduce dependency on fossil fuels by: improved fuel efficiency, renewable energy use, phasing out conventionally-fuelled cars in cities by 2050, improved multimodal logistics, better transport networks; more efficient vehicles. || - Increase resource efficiency of infrastructures; -Optimise logistics of materials transportation; -Ensure security of supply of critical materials (needed for batteries). || -Use the potential of water transport to reduce emissions; -Reduce pollution from water transport. || -Reduce pollution from transport: 60% less GHG by 2050; less ground-level ozone, particulate matter, NO2; less sulphur content in marine fuels. || -Minimise impacts of transport infrastructure on land fragmentation. || - Minimise impacts of transport infrastructure on land sealing. || -Minimise impacts of land sealing, fragmentation, pollution; -Avoid invasive alien species spread. || -Use the potential of maritime transport to reduce emissions; -Avoid marine litter, including from ships || -Ensure efficient reuse and recycling of end-of life vehicles (85-95% by 2015) and ships. || -White Paper on the future of transport (2011) -Revision of TEN-T (2011) -Strategic Transport Technology Plan

EU policy initiatives || State Aid framework (2013); Fuel quality directive; etc. || -Tackling the challenges in commodity markets and on raw materials (2011) -Proposal for an Innovation Partnership on raw materials || -Blueprint on water (2012) -Innovation partnership on water efficiency -Revision of the EQS Directive (priority substances) (2011) -Revision of the Ground Water Directive (2012) || -Low Carbon economy 2050 roadmap (2011) -Revision of the legislation on monitoring and reporting of GHG -Review of EU air quality policy (2013) || -Communication on land use (2014) -Communication on LULUCF in the EU climate change commitments (2011) [ || -Guidelines on best practice to limit, mitigate or compensate soil sealing || -2020 EU biodiversity strategy (2011) -Communication on Green Infrastructure and Restoration (2012) -No Net Loss Initiative (2015) || - Reform of Common Maritime and fisheries policy (2011)[AGRI] -Climate Change adaptation in the coast and the sea (2012) -Blue Growth (2013) -Integrated Coastal Zone Management (2012) -Maritime Spatial Planning (2012) || -Review of prevention, reuse, recycling and landfill of waste targets (2014) || -Roadmap to a resource efficient Europe (2011) -Multiannual Financial Framework 2014-2020 -Cohesion Policy post 2013 (2011)[REGIO] -Action Plan towards a sustainable bio-based economy by 2020 (2011) -Eco-Innovation Action Plan(2011) -EU Horizon 2020 (2011) -Review of EIA Directive

[1]               COM(2011) 21.

[2]               COM(2005) 670.

[3]               As for instance reflected in the OECD's Green Growth
Strategy and UNEP's Green Economy report, as well as work by the European
Environment Agency.

[4]               http://ec.europa.eu/governance/impact/index\_en.htm

[5]               As set out in the accompanying COM(2011) 571.

[6]               In Germany alone a study suggests
that resource-efficiency gains in manufacturing could generate cost savings of between
20% and 30% and up to 1 million jobs for the country. Another recent study
estimates at £23 billion the savings from low or no-cost resource efficiency
measures businesses could make in the UK.

[7]               See the Staff Working
Document for details.

[8]               OECD, Environmentally harmful subsidies: challenges
for reform, 2005

[9]               COM(2011) 11 final.

[10]             COM(2011) 11 final.

[11]             EUCO 10/1/11 REV1.

[12]             Taxation trends in the European Union, European Union
2011.

[13]             EU Water saving potential, Ecologic, 2007.

[14]             EEA, SOER 2010

[15]             Assessment of Health-Cost Externalities of Air
Pollution at the National Level using the EVA Model System, J. Brandt et al.,
CEEH 2011.

[16]             Report on best practices for
limiting soil sealing and mitigating its effects,
Prokop et al, European Communities 2011.

[17]             COM(2011) 112, COM(2011) 109, COM(2010) 639.

[18]             COM(2011) 500.

[19]             COM(2007) 860 final.

[20]             COM(2007) 414 final.

[21]             Directive
2010/31/EU.

[22]             In line with Art. 9 of Directive 2010/31/EU of 19 May
2010.

[23]             In line with Art 11 of Directive 2008/98/EC.

[24]             COM(2011) 144.

[25]             UNEP Green Economy Synthesis 2010

[26]             To illustrate the indicator, the EU average was around
1.30 €/tonne in 2007, ranging from below 0.3 to around 2.5.

[27]             COM(2011) 363.

[28]             The cost of not implementing the environmental acquis,
COWI, forthcoming

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