18
Jun
2026
Watch
Circularity requirements for vehicle design and management of end-of-life vehicles (debate)
Madam President, colleagues, everyone is fighting over raw materials: the Chinese create monopolies; Trump tries to blackmail us over them; and we, as Europe, we're just giving them away for free. Every year, 3.5 million cars are shipped out of Europe. Those are cars full of steel, full of copper – the exact materials that our factories need. So we dig them out of the ground in some parts of the world, and then we ship them off again as car wrecks to another part of the world. This law finally stops this absurdity. Those wrecks stay here to be taken apart and to reuse those resources. And even better, new cars will have to be built with recycled materials, like plastics and, in the future, metals. That really creates the demand we need for these materials, and it's exactly what is needed for our recyclers, our local businesses creating jobs here in our own towns. So this law is really the Green Deal keeping its promise. We're bringing good industry jobs to Europe instead of outsourcing them. And it creates a Europe that depends on no one but itself. I do still have a question for the conservatives: why did you want to gut the measures that would actually help out recyclers in Europe? Because time and time again, you claim to defend the interests of small businesses. But what I saw during those negotiations was actually the opposite – you defended the interests of car multinationals. Those are the ones that shipped European jobs to China just to earn an extra buck. Luckily, we avoided the worst of it. So today we are taking an important step forward. We're happy to vote for a law that shows that we are able to strengthen our economy and the independence of Europe.