
Market Commentary
LEGO Surpasses 50% Renewable and Recycled Raw Materials to Make its Bricks
InvestorDaily
The LEGO Group revealed significant progress in its efforts to increase the use of sustainable materials in its products, announcing that it reached 52% renewable and recycled content in the materials used to produce its LEGO bricks in 2025, up from 33% the prior year. The new data was released with LEGO Group’s 2025 Sustainability Statement, outlining the company’s progress towards its sustainability targets. The company’s goals include making its products from more sustainable materials, or those produced using renewable or recycled resources and generating little or no waste, by 2032, as well as its targets to reach net zero emissions across the value chain by 2050 and to reduce carbon emissions by 37% by 2032, on a 2019 basis.
LEGO Group also announced that it increased investments in sustainability, with total spending on environmental and social initiatives rising 20% year-over-year in 2025, after growing by 68% the prior year. One of LEGO Group’s sustainability strategy’s key focus areas includes initiatives to invest in sustainable materials research to reduce the carbon footprint of products and packaging. While the company uses some recycled and renewable materials directly in its brick production, most of its sustainable materials are sourced through a mass balance approach under which suppliers mix input from both virgin fossil and certified renewable and recycled sources, such as used cooking oil or plant oil, with the suppliers providing certificates confirming the amount of renewable content LEGO Group has purchased.
The rest of this article can be found at esgtoday.com.
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