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Technology-Driven Landfill Solutions: Optimizing Residual Waste Treatment and Diversion Systems

After Event Post

Across Europe, landfills remain under immense pressure as waste volumes grow and recycling targets tighten. Despite ambitious EU directives, over 20% of municipal waste still ends up in landfills, releasing methane and losing valuable resources that could be recovered. This challenge is not just a compliance issue—it is a missed opportunity for circularity, energy recovery, and climate action.

These were the central themes of the SIERA Impact Webinar – Technology-Driven Landfill Solutions: Optimizing Residual Waste Treatment and Diversion Systems, held on September 18, 2025. Hosted by SIERA Academy, the session brought together experts to examine how smart technologies, regulatory frameworks, and innovative treatment systems can transform waste management across Europe.

The European Challenge: Why Landfill Reduction Matters

Despite decades of progress, many EU member states continue to struggle with high landfill rates. Countries like Germany, Austria, and Belgium have made impressive progress, reaching near-zero landfill rates. However, in others—such as Greece, Malta, and Romania—over 70% of municipal waste still goes to landfill.

The consequences are severe:

  • Greenhouse gas emissions: Landfills are a major source of methane, a gas 28 times more potent than CO₂.
  • Lost resources: Valuable recyclables are buried instead of re-entering the circular economy.
  • Compliance gaps: EU recycling targets of 55% by 2025 and less than 10% landfill use by 2035 remain far out of reach for many.

Key Barriers to Smarter Waste Management

The webinar highlighted several persistent challenges:

  1. Technical Gaps
    • Outdated sorting and collection systems.
    • Limited Mechanical Biological Treatment (MBT) and Waste-to-Energy (WtE) capacity.
  2. Data & Monitoring Weaknesses
    • Inconsistent waste tracking.
    • Low methane monitoring coverage.
    • Poor traceability of recovered materials.
  3. Operational Inefficiencies
    • Uneven source segregation.
    • Weak connections between recyclers and energy recovery operators.
  4. Policy & Compliance Issues
    • Slow enforcement of EU directives.
    • Fragmented reporting standards.

Together, these factors explain why landfill reliance persists, despite regulatory and technological advancements.

Opportunities: From Smart Systems to Circular Loops

The webinar didn’t just focus on problems—it outlined clear opportunities for transformation.

  • Smart Collection Systems: AI-enabled bins, optimized routing, and contamination monitoring can reduce mixed waste, lower CO₂ emissions, and increase citizen participation.
  • Closing the Loop: Advanced recovery facilities can reclaim up to 95% of key recyclables, cutting virgin material demand by up to 30%.
  • Expanding MBT: Biological stabilization and advanced sorting can divert 30–50% of residual waste, preventing landfill overuse.
  • Waste-to-Energy (WTE): Modern combined heat and power (CHP) plants can meet 10–15% of district heating needs, while recovering metals from ash and even integrating carbon capture.

These approaches align not only with environmental targets but also with economic opportunities, making waste treatment a driver of innovation and resilience.

Regulatory Drivers: Compliance as an Enabler

The discussion also underscored the importance of the EU’s regulatory framework:

  • Landfill Directive: Less than 10% of municipal waste to landfill by 2035.
  • Waste Framework Directive: Prioritizing prevention, reuse, recycling, and recovery.
  • Methane Regulation: Mandatory monitoring and mitigation of landfill methane.
  • Renewable Energy Directive: Recognizing biogenic waste-to-energy as a renewable source.

These directives are not only compliance requirements—they are powerful drivers of investment and innovation.

Digital Backbone: SustainSuite

The webinar introduced SustainSuite, EUTECH’s digital compliance platform. It enables:

  • Real-time monitoring of waste diversion and methane emissions.
  • Automated data collection and ESG optimization.
  • Transparent CSRD reporting and EU taxonomy alignment.

Key Takeaways

  1. Source separation is the foundation of higher recycling and landfill reduction.
  2. MBT and WTE systems stabilize waste, recover energy, and reduce methane emissions.
  3. Digital tools like SustainSuite ensure compliance while unlocking actionable insights.
  4. Landfill should be the last resort—not the default pathway.

From Webinar to Action

This SIERA Impact Webinar reinforced that technology, policy, and collaboration can transform waste management from a liability into a source of climate value.

 What’s next?

  • Book a consultation with SIERA experts to explore tailored waste strategies.
  • Access the upcoming white paper for deeper insights.
  • Partner with SIERA Alliance & SustainSuite to simplify your ESG and CSRD compliance journey.

Join our next event and power your impact – Event Calendar | SIERA Alliance Events

Together, we can turn Europe’s waste into a resource, building a smarter, circular, and low-emission future – Engineering for a Better Tomorrow.

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A Message from the Founder: Florian von Tucher

In the mid-2000s my involvement in development aid took me to some of the most remote and impoverished regions of the world. 

Northern Tibet, Mongolia, and Western China – where I was involved with the implementation of decentralised wastewater treatment systems, I realised I needed a deeper purpose. Though I later found success in real estate development, the desire to make a lasting impact never left me.  

A pivotal moment occurred when I was invited to Ghana by my friend and mentor, Cardinal Peter Turkson, who was the head of the Dicastery for the Promotion of Integral Human Development of the Catholic Church at the time. He has since been appointed the Pontifical Chancellor of the Academy of Sciences and the Pontifical Chancellor of Social Sciences.  

Cardinal Turkson had a profound influence on me. His invitation gave me the opportunity to witness firsthand the development needs of the country. We reflected on my experiences in China, and together, we envisioned a model of development that would take root in one community and gradually expand. We believed that small, strategic steps could lead to lasting transformation – just like the biblical parable of the mustard seed, which grows into something far greater than its humble beginnings. 

Cardinal Turkson’s steadfast belief in this vision and encouragement became the base upon which the Mustard Seed Foundation was built. His unwavering support, wisdom, and guidance helped shape not just the mission of the Foundation, but my personal journey as well. 

With the encouragement of the Cardinal and the Integral Human Development (IHD) office, we initially operated with the IHD before establishing the Mustard Seed Foundation as a stand-alone organisation in Germany. We have been fortunate to receive support from numerous European donors, a humble reminder that our mission is not just about individual efforts – it is about collective impact. 

Collaboration has been a cornerstone of our work. We have partnered with organisations like Caritas and Rotary International to extend our reach. One of our most impactful collaborations has been with M&P Group, who donate their engineering concepts, project supervision, and high-quality technical execution, allowing 100% of donor contributions to go into the projects themselves. 

One such initiative is the Clean Water Initiative, launched in partnership with M&P Group. In 2024, we completed a well in Ndoss, Senegal, significantly improving agricultural efficiency and empowering the local community. This project epitomises our commitment to sustainable solutions – starting with clean water and gradually building infrastructure that supports long-term development. 

Our work aligns closely with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), focusing on poverty alleviation, economic empowerment, environmental sustainability, and humanitarian aid. Our model is simple but effective: start with one project and expand, year by year, to create an ecosystem of support. A water well leads to a school, which leads to renewable energy solutions, which, in turn, fosters economic opportunities. Over time, these efforts cumulatively transform entire regions. 

The Mustard Seed Foundation is a testament to what can be achieved with nothing more than a vision, a strong commitment, and the faith of a mustard seed. Yet, none of this would have been possible without the belief and encouragement of Cardinal Peter Turkson. His unwavering faith in our mission gave me the courage to persevere through challenges and continue expanding our impact. As we continue our work, we remain driven by the belief that small beginnings can yield great outcomes, inspiring hope and lasting change in the communities we serve. His legacy of faith, vision, and commitment to human dignity is deeply woven into every initiative we undertake.