Total raw material productivity in Germany increased by 36 % between 2010 and 2023. According to preliminary calculations, a particularly sharp increase in total raw material productivity was recorded in 2023. This was due to a significant decline in raw material input (RMI) by 235 million tons to around 2.4 billion tons, while gross domestic product (GDP, price-adjusted) declined only slightly. The observed decline in the RMI significantly exceeded the slight decline in GDP—amid global economic developments in relevant economic regions.
In the new edition of the German Sustainability Strategy of 2016, the German Government has set a new goal for the further growth of raw material productivity: Between 2010 and 2030, the value is expected to increase by an average of roughly 1.6 % per year, which was the average annual increase between 2000 and 2010. Growth from 2010 to 2023 exceeded this target corridor once again.
The German Resource Efficiency Programme III (ProgRess III) records a large number of measures for the years from 2020 onwards to increase the productivity of raw materials. As new topics, resource-efficient mobility and the potentials and risks of digitalization for resource efficiency are now being considered in ProgRess III. The German government also developed the National Circular Economy Strategy (NCES) in 2024, which brings together targets and measures for circular economy and sustainable resource use from all relevant strategies. The indicator “Total Raw Material Productivity” is also included as a central indicator and target in this strategy.