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In recent years, sustainability has moved from being a slogan to becoming an industrial strategy. Today, the circular economy in Italian companies is no longer a long-term vision but a fast-growing reality, reshaping production processes, access to credit and competitiveness in international markets. This trend is confirmed by the latest Clean Technology Observatory 2025, which portrays a country where the ecological transition is consolidating despite geopolitical tensions and macroeconomic uncertainty.
The most striking data is the growth in investments: 72% of Italian companies allocated resources to sustainability projects, with a significant leap in the circular economy, rising from 16% in 2023 to 27% in 2025. Waste recycling, regenerated materials and energy efficiency are no longer isolated experiments but structural elements of corporate strategies.
This transformation is already delivering concrete results. Seven out of ten companies report cost savings, while more than a third have already improved profitability and access to credit. Benefits also extend beyond economics: six in ten businesses report a positive impact on brand reputation, proving how sustainability strengthens competitive positioning.
Innovation is the main driver of this transition. Seventy-two percent of companies see ESG criteria as a strategic factor and recognize the circular economy as an accelerator of process renewal. However, obstacles remain: high costs, lack of incentives and regulatory complexity slow down part of the production system, especially SMEs without structured industrial plans.
The National Recovery and Resilience Plan (PNRR) still represents a partially untapped opportunity. More than half of Italian companies see it as useful, but only 4% have accessed actual funding, highlighting a persistent bureaucratic gap.
The overall picture is clear: the circular economy in Italian companies is set to grow stronger, not only as a response to environmental and regulatory pressures but as a real engine of competitiveness. The challenge, however, requires targeted policies, simpler access to incentives and stronger technical skills.
For the seafood industry, these dynamics have a specific meaning: advanced waste management, recyclable packaging and energy optimization in cold chains are becoming real levers of competitiveness and innovation. These are decisive challenges for companies and processing plants investing in energy efficiency.
In conclusion, businesses that integrate sustainability into their industrial models will not only reduce costs but also gain an advantage in markets increasingly shaped by green criteria. Sustainability is no longer optional—it is the key to growth in a global economy demanding responsibility, innovation and long-term vision.
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L’articolo Circular economy in Italian companies 2025 proviene da Pesceinrete.
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