24 July

This year (2025) Earth Overshoot Day is 24 July, as compared to last year's 1 August.
Earth Overshoot Day is the day in the year that the consumption of the earth’s natural resource by humans exceeds the ability of the earth to regenerate those resources in 12 months.
Or, to put it another way, we currently need 1.7 earths to sustain current human consumption. Nearly 50 years ago this day was December 31*.
The UK's own Earth Overshoot Day is 20 May: www.overshootday.org/newsroom/country-overshoot-days/
Why not measure your own footprint: www.footprintcalculator.org
How metals recycling contributes to net zero
Metal, unlike some other recyclable materials, is in the enviable position of being endlessly recyclable. Closed loop recycling systems operate for aluminium metal drinks container enabling them to be back on a shelf in 60 days. It also offers limitless potential for its future uses. Metal from cars can become reinforcing bars for skyscrapers or metal parts for computers, or any number of components for another car. Metal from mobile phones has been used to make Olympic medals.
This is before you consider that metal recycling protects the environment by reducing the need for mining and the destruction of natural habitat, as well as saving energy and reducing emissions.
But the BMRA is not just focusing on what this industry is doing externally, we look to what metal recyclers can do themselves. This is why we have launched the BMRA's Sustainability Hub to assist members in reaching their own decarbonisation goals.
BMRA's Carbon Action Committee is dedicated to identifying best practice in decarbonisation and will seek economic alternatives for metal recyclers to switch to net zero themselves, capitalising on the already well-established green credentials of metal recycling by enabling the industry as a whole to benefit.
*https://overshoot.footprintnetwork.org/newsroom/past-earth-overshoot-days/