El Corte Ingles makes significant progress on circularity

Member News
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Jun 2026
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RHH Digital

What: El Corte Inglés has achieved AENOR Zero Waste certification across all department stores, Supercor, Sanchez Romero, outlets, and logistics platforms, valorising more than 94% of managed waste in 2025.

Why it is important: El Corte Inglés’s progress highlights the growing importance of audited sustainability systems, operational discipline, and employee engagement in building trust and regulatory resilience.

El Corte Inglés has reached its 2026 roadmap target by achieving AENOR Zero Waste certification across all department stores, Supercor, Sanchez Romero, outlets, and logistics platforms in Spain and Portugal. More than 300 sites are now certified, with over 100,000 tonnes of waste valorised in 2025, representing more than 94% of all managed waste and avoiding over 61,000 tonnes of CO₂e emissions. The system covers more than 50 waste fractions, including paper, cardboard, plastics, organic waste, and electronic equipment, supporting circular economy outcomes such as compost production, biogas generation, raw material recovery, and reduced fossil fuel use. The programme is supported by internal and external audits, staff training, regional environmental delegates, and Zero Waste managers at each certified site. By embedding waste valorisation into stores, logistics, employee routines, customer waste streams, food donation, and transport optimization, El Corte Inglés shows how sustainability can become a disciplined, measurable operating model across a large retail network.

IADS Notes: Modaes in August 2025 reports that El Corte Inglés’s 2025–2030 Sustainability Plan focuses on environmental impact reduction, social responsibility, governance innovation, circular economy projects, decarbonisation, and the goal of reaching carbon neutrality by 2050. Digital Leon in March 2026 shows the group participating in WWF’s Earth Hour campaign, using store lighting and employee communications to promote climate action, biodiversity protection, and ESG awareness. The June 2026 company press release reports double-digit profit growth, record-low debt, increased investment, digital transformation, store modernisation, logistics innovation, and operational excellence, providing context for how sustainability initiatives are embedded within a broader transformation agenda. Modaes and Fashion Network in July 2025 detail the group’s €3 billion investment plan through 2030, including store modernisation, logistics, technology, business expansion, and operational transformation. Modaes in July 2025 highlights the value of El Corte Inglés’s real estate portfolio at €15.716 billion and its focus on strategic asset management, relevant to waste management and efficiency across stores and logistics platforms. Forbes in May 2026 positions El Corte Inglés as a social, cultural, and commercial hub in Spain, while Modaes in April 2026 covers its broader roadmap under Cristina Álvarez, including operational renewal, cross-functional teams, cost reduction, and disciplined investment. These sources show that the Zero Waste certification sits within a wider strategy linking circular economy, operational efficiency, ESG engagement, asset optimisation, and long-term retail transformation.

El Corte Ingles makes significant progress on circularity