Factual summary report on the public consultation for the new Bioeconomy Strategy
This document should be regarded solely as a summary of the contributions made by stakeholders during the public consultation for the initiative ‘Towards a circular, regenerative and competitive bioeconomy’. It cannot in any circumstances be regarded as the official position of the Commission or its services. Responses to the consultation activities cannot be considered as a representative sample of the views of the EU population.
1.Background and objectives of the public consultation
This public consultation is a key part of efforts to develop a new EU Bioeconomy Strategy, in line with the Better Regulation Guidelines, which ensure that EU policies are evidence-based, effective, and involve relevant stakeholders in shaping decisions. The strategy is aligned with the goals of the European Commission’s Competitiveness Compass, 1 which provides a framework to strengthen Europe’s industrial base and global competitiveness. It also supports the Clean Industrial Deal, 2 which focuses on decarbonising industries and boosting green innovation to achieve climate neutrality.
The initiative is vital for EU economic and industrial competitiveness and its broader strategic goals, while ensuring the sustainable and regenerative use of biomass as the raw material of the bioeconomy, contributing to climate change solutions, maximising circularity in the European bioeconomy and increasing long-term value of biomass. It aims to empower the most relevant economic sectors such as agriculture, forestry, fisheries, biomanufacturing and biotechnologies industries, but also EU citizens, to harness the potential of biomass in a sustainable and environmentally sound way. This non-legislative initiative is expected to be published in the last quarter of 2025.
The public consultation was published on the European Commission’s Have your say and was open to all interested parties and stakeholders from 31 March to 23 June 2025. 3 This report gives a concise, factual summary of the responses received. This initial overview of stakeholder input provides a neutral, brief look at what has been said, and it does not contain any deeper analysis or interpretation of the public consultation’s results.
The stakeholder views were collected through open and closed questions 4 and the respondents were invited to provide feedback in an open text form in English or any other EU official language. They were also encouraged to upload their responses in the form of position paper files.
2.Responses to the public consultation
2.1Breakdown of the respondents
The public consultation has gathered a total of 362 responses, out of which 149 included additional uploaded files, in most cases, documents to support the answers, but in some cases position papers as well. 5
Figure 1 . below displays the distribution of respondents by country, where only countries that have two or more respondents are shown. Belgium 6 and Germany lead, with 88 (24%) and 62 (17%) respondents respectively, succeeded by France with 40 respondents (11%), the Netherlands with 26 (7%) and Italy with 23 (6%). Many countries have only one respondent: Australia, China, Croatia, Czechia, Hungary, Lithuania, Malta, Norway, Peru, Slovakia, Slovenia and South Africa.
Figure 1. Distribution of respondents by country (only 2 or more respondents)
As shown in Figure 2 . below, when it comes to the split by types of organisations participating, the business association and company/business categories lead with 101 participants (28%), and 88 participants (24%). Non-governmental organisations see a significantly lower representation with 40 participants (11%), similarly to the academic/research institutions with 36 participants (10%).
In terms of EU citizens, the public consultation had 28 respondents (8%), and the same number of participants in terms of public authorities. The least represented were non-EU citizens, trade unions and consumer organisations.
Figure 2. Distribution of respondents by organisation type
Zooming in on participants’ organisation size, as shown in Figure 3 ., the largest group consists of large organisations, which make up 35% of the total responses with an actual number of 127, followed closely by micro organisations, accounting for 28% (102 respondents). Small organisations represent 20% (71), while medium organisations make up 9% with 33 respondents. The remaining 8% of respondents (29) did not provide information on their organisation’s size.
Figure 3. Distribution of respondents by organisation size