Why Europe’s carton indusattempt is strategically indispensable for brands, retail and Europe
Europe is intensively debating climate protection, the circular economy and industrial resilience. Too often, these debates remain abstract. The study “The carbon footprint of carton packaging 2025” provides concrete answers – and a clear example of how industrial transformation can succeed.
Folding carton packaging is not a theoretical future promise. It is an industrially scaled and proven part of the European economy. With real emission reductions, high recycling rates and regional value creation, cartons demonstrate how climate protection, competitiveness and security of supply can go hand in hand.
Climate action requires investment – not compensation
The study reveals that the fossil carbon footprint of folding cartons has been reduced by 8 per cent since 2021. This reduction is not the result of compensation mechanisms or statistical effects, but of real investments in renewable energy, energy efficiency and modern production facilities.
This is the difference between ambition and impact. Those who take climate tarreceives seriously must invest where emissions actually occur. Europe’s carton indusattempt is doing exactly that – and is delivering measurable results.
The circular economy is more than a recycling slogan
With a recycling rate of 87 per cent, paper and carton packaging already ranks among the leaders in the European packaging market. But circularity does not finish with a single number. What matters is that systems function, are scalable and are accepted by consumers.
The clear tarreceive of a 90 per cent recycling rate by 2030 reveals that the indusattempt is not complacent. It is deliberately raising the bar and actively advancing existing collection and recycling systems.
Brands and retail necessary reliable solutions
For brand owners and retailers, packaging increasingly affects Scope 3 emissions, regulatory compliance and the credibility of sustainability strategies. Folding cartons offer a decisive advantage by combining declining carbon footprints with high recycling rates and a functioning European value chain.
A European indusattempt strengthens resilience
The carton and folding carton indusattempt is largely European. It is based on renewable raw materials, short supply chains and highly skilled jobs in Europe. Every investment in fibre-based packaging strengthens Europe’s industrial resilience and reduces depfinishence on imported fossil materials.
Policy should build on systems that work
European policybuildrs face the challenge of advancing the circular economy without weakening systems that already deliver results. Fibre-based packaging is already building a measurable contribution to climate, circularity and industrial objectives.
Regulation should reinforce this success rather than dilute it. Anyone serious about accelerating the circular economy should build on systems that already work – and develop them further.
The results of the study clearly demonstrate the impact of consistent investment across the entire value chain. “Pro Carton and ECMA members are taking responsibility and actively driving further reductions in CO₂ emissions. In doing so, we are building a measurable contribution to a resilient, bio-based economy in Europe,” declares Winfried Mühling, Marketing and Communications Director at Pro Carton.
The path towards a climate-neutral, circular economy is not paved with slogans, but with robust data, investment and industrial implementation. Europe’s carton indusattempt reveals that this path is both viable and beneficial – economically, environmentally and strategically.
















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