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ECESP Annual Conference Unites EU Stakeholders on Circular Economy

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Summary

The ECESP Annual Conference held April 22-23, 2026 brought together EU institutions, civil society, academics, industry, and young people to discuss circular economy challenges. Key themes included the forthcoming Circular Economy Act (targeting supply and demand for secondary raw materials and strategic autonomy), financing barriers to circular business scale-up, and the social dimension of circular transition. The conference noted that Europe's circularity rate stands at just 12%, with speakers emphasizing urgency amid climate emergency and geopolitical supply concerns.

“The circular economy has a long way to go – after all, the circularity rate stands at 12%.”

EC , verbatim from source
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GovPing monitors EU DG JUST for new environment regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 13 changes logged to date.

What changed

The ECESP Annual Conference report summarizes discussions held April 22-23, 2026 covering the forthcoming Circular Economy Act (CEA), financing barriers for circular businesses, and the social dimension of the circular transition. The CEA aims to boost secondary raw materials supply and demand while strengthening Europe's strategic autonomy. Conference discussions highlighted that bankers remain reluctant to finance unfamiliar circular business models, proposing solutions including educating financiers and targeting open-minded capital funds.

EU businesses, policymakers, and stakeholders should note that the Commission will collect feedback on the CEA next year, suggesting forthcoming consultation opportunities. Organizations involved in manufacturing, resource extraction, and product design may face new regulatory requirements or market shifts as circular economy principles become more central to EU industrial policy. The 12% circularity rate statistic underscores the significant transformation still required.

Archived snapshot

Apr 28, 2026

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ECESP Annual Conference: a successful event with important messages

Date 24 Apr 2026 News type Circular economy event Sector Bioeconomy and Biomimicry, Governance, Product as a Service, Social impact Scope EU, Coordination Group 2025-2028 Conference webpage Our conference finished yesterday evening, having brought together EU institutions, civil society, academics, industry and young people to discuss all aspects of the circular economy, from legislation to social impact. Our new Coordination Group members shone as they spoke about the areas in which they are experts.

The various sessions and workshops looked at the forthcoming Circular Economy Act, designing local projects that turn abstract circular principles into tangible experiences that can help people, the need to link up the circular economy and the bioeconomy, what young people feel about circularity, the role of transition brokers – it was certainly a packed programme!

The CEA was a major theme. It will boost supply and demand for secondary raw materials and strengthen Europe's strategic autonomy, contributing to competitiveness and making Europe less dependent for critical resources. It won't be perfect, but the Commission will collect feedback on it next year.

It's clear that financing is a major barrier to real scale-up of circular businesses and projects. Bankers are reluctant to finance a type of business they are not familiar with and that doesn't have a proven track record. Two possible solutions to this were proposed: educating financiers and targeting types of capital funds that are more open to circular projects.

Another overarching theme was the social dimension. The circular economy is a huge shift in mindset – and that cannot be successful if it is imposed by legislation. Civil society has to be a key player here. People have to be shown why changing their behaviour matters, why renting rather than buying can be preferable, why they should aim to repair an item rather than throwing it out and getting a new one. Decision makers must listen to young people who will be living with the consequences of current action, and community-level projects demonstrating the practical, day-to-day value of circular principles must be supported.

The circular economy has a long way to go – after all, the circularity rate stands at 12%. However, between the climate emergency underlining in fire and flood that business as usual is not working and the geopolitical situation making it plain that relying on other countries is not viable, speakers and participants were clear: we cannot wait any longer to start delivering on the circular economy.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
EC
Published
April 24th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Manufacturers Environmental groups
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Policy conference Sustainability initiatives Environmental regulation
Geographic scope
European Union EU

Taxonomy

Primary area
Environmental Protection
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Energy Consumer Protection Agriculture

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