A 21% increase is reported for positive outcomes on the eco-innovation scoreboard across in the EU, with an increasing trend oberved for most Member States.

Loading chart...

Title: Eco-Innovation Scoreboard

Status: Signal

Coverage: EU Member States, 2012-2021

Source: Eco-Innovation Index, 2022, European Commission.

The figure depicts the level of performance of the EU and its Member States in terms of eco-innovation, as measured by the Eco-Innovation Index. High performance is led by Luxembourg, Finland, Denmark and Austria. Data show a gradual increase of the EU score between 2012 and 2021 (raise of 21 index scores, meaning also a 21% increase) and overall increases for almost all Member States (ranging from 1 to 36 index scores, and from 2% to 61% of relative change). The highest increases in performance (i.e. increased index value in absolute terms), have been observed for Greece, Slovenia, Italy and Croatia, all countries below the EU Eco-Innovation Index average. This gives insight about how many countries lagging behind the EU average are catching up. Also about countries where the uptake of eco-innovation has been limited so far. 

It needs to be noted that these data are a proxy of innovation towards a circular economy: while eco-innovation is needed for the transition to a circular economy, eco-innovation itself is not a one-to-one indication of innovation enabling a more circular economy.

Eco-Innovation refers to innovation resulting in or aiming at significant and demonstrable progress towards sustainable development, through reducing impacts on the environment, enhancing resilience to environmental pressures, or achieving a more efficient and responsible use of natural resource. It therefore can also relate to innovation towards a more circular economy (e.g. material sourcing, products’ design, use and end of life, etc.). Eco-innovation can include public support and research & development (R&D) in sustainable innovation, among other. 

Definition

The Eco-innovation Index of the Eco-Innovation Scoreboard aims at measuring the performance of Member States in the field of environmental innovations.

Methodology

  • The Eco-innovation Index is calculated as a unweighted average of a series of innovation-related metrics, covering eco-innovation inputs, activities and outputs, as well as resource efficiency and socio-economic outputs:
    • Eco-innovation inputs
      • Governments environmental and energy R&D appropriations and outlays
      • Total R&D personnel and researchers
      • Total value of green early-stage investments
    • Eco-innovation activities
      • Implementation of resource efficiency actions among SME
      • Implementation of sustainable products among SMEs
      • Number of ISO 14001 certificates
    • Eco-innovation outputs
      • Eco-innovation related patents
      • Eco-innovation related academic publications
      • Eco-innovation related media coverage
    • Resource efficiency outcomes
      • Material productivity;
      • Water productivity (GDP/total fresh water abstraction);
      • Energy productivity
      • GHG emissions productivity
    • Socio-economic outcomes
      • Exports of environmental goods and service sector
      • Employment in environmental protection and resource management activities

      • Value added in environmental protection and resource management activities

Metadata

  • Source: The Eco-Innovation Scoreboard and the Eco-Innovation Index: Eco-Innovation (europa.eu)

  • Unit: Index (the maximum score is the highest score found across all years within all countries, excluding positive outliers. Similarly, the minimum score is the lowest score found across all years within all countries, excluding negative outliers).

  • Temporal coverage: 2012-2021.

  • Geographic coverage: EU27 and Member States.

Continue browsing in the Circularity Metric Lab by visiting one of these topic areas: