Europe · Automotive · Circular Economy

The Council of the European Union has approved new End-of-Life Vehicle (ELV) Regulation rules to promote a more circular automotive sector. The regulation introduces mandatory recycled-plastic content targets, strengthens end-of-life vehicle management, expands producer responsibility, and tightens export controls for passenger cars and light commercial vehicles.

Key Regulatory Measures

Recycled Content
Mandatory Material Targets
Future recycled-content requirements apply to plastics, steel, aluminium, magnesium, and critical raw materials used in new vehicles.

Vehicle Lifecycle
Extended Producer Responsibility
Manufacturers become responsible for vehicle take-back, recycling, recovery, and compliance with stricter end-of-life vehicle management rules.

The regulation also prohibits the export of waste or non-roadworthy vehicles and establishes phased recycled-plastic content targets. At least 20% of recycled plastic used in new vehicles must originate from end-of-life vehicles, increasing to 25% recycled plastic within 10 years, with an interim target of 15% recycled plastic within 6 years.

Key Dates & Regulatory Timeline

  • Council approval: June 29, 2026
  • Official publication: To be published in the Official Journal of the European Union
  • Compliance milestones: Phased recycled-content targets and implementation dates will apply following formal publication
  • Current status: Council approval completed; detailed implementation timeline to follow

Major Requirements

  • Mandatory recycled-plastic content targets
  • Future recycled-content requirements for metals and critical raw materials
  • Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) obligations
  • Vehicle take-back, recycling and recovery requirements
  • Ban on exporting waste or non-roadworthy vehicles

Who Is Affected

  • Automotive OEMs producing passenger cars and light commercial vehicles
  • Vehicle recyclers and dismantlers
  • Steel, aluminium, magnesium and plastics suppliers
  • Automotive material suppliers
  • Product stewardship and sustainability teams

What Companies Should Do Now

  • Track the 15%, 20%, and 25% recycled-plastic content targets across vehicle platforms
  • Prepare for Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) take-back obligations
  • Review sourcing strategies for recycled plastics and critical materials
  • Monitor publication in the Official Journal and final compliance dates
  • Assess product designs and supply chains against future circular economy requirements
Key Takeaway

This high-priority regulation significantly advances the EU’s circular economy objectives for the automotive sector. Automotive OEMs, suppliers, recyclers, and material manufacturers should begin planning for recycled-content requirements, expanded producer responsibility obligations, and stricter end-of-life vehicle management as the regulation progresses toward formal implementation.

 

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