Heating, cooling, and cooking accounts for a staggering 85% of energy used globally – with 76% of that coming from fossil fuels. This pollutes more than all the cars in the EU combined. The way we consume energy must change – including how we heat and cool buildings, how we cook food, and how we use batteries (particularly for electric vehicles). Transitioning away from fossil fuels to renewable energy is a must. We must stop installing new fossil fuel-based devices as soon as possible, exchanging them for appliances and systems that use renewable electricity. ECOS works to make this a reality through standards, policies, laws, and campaigns.
The seventh session of the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA-7) will bring together all 193 UN Member States in Nairobi, Kenya in December 2025 to address common environmental challenges. Accredited NGO observers, including ECOS, will join them. What can we expect? We outline the environmental potential of two key resolutions: on sustainable use of AI and sound management of chemicals and waste.
To manage global resources sustainably, we must make our appliances last longer and be more energy and material efficient. A new European standard has started this process for washing machines, introducing a new method for testing how durable they are before being sold. This is a first step towards unlocking the full load of environmental and consumer benefits.
Ecodesign, an EU success story, is expanding. More products than ever will soon be designed from the outset with sustainability in mind — a development that will be good for the environment and consumers. But how? And when? The Ecodesigned4LIFE project consortium, ECOS, BEUC, and ANEC, break it down.
ECOS joins +60 other organisations in calling on EU policymakers to make eCommerce rules stronger, safer, and fairer - without loopholes for online trade.
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ECOS is co-funded by the European Commission and EFTA
Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or EISMEA. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.
