Waste volume growth
Airport waste volumes have increased sharply post-pandemic, with some hubs reporting rises of up to around 30 per cent compared to pre-pandemic levels.
As global air travel rebounds and continues to grow, airports are facing unprecedented pressure to manage ever-increasing volumes of waste, from general waste to recyclables and food waste, while maintaining world-class standards of hygiene, safety, and sustainability.
According to the International Air Transport Association (IATA), passenger numbers are expected to exceed 9 billion by 2035. With this growth comes a surge in airport waste, currently estimated at over 5.7 million tonnes annually worldwide. Traditional manual waste collection systems can no longer meet the efficiency or environmental standards of modern aviation hubs.
Envac, a global leader in automatic pneumatic waste collection with installations across Europe, Asia, and the Middle East, is helping airports transition toward cleaner, safer, and smarter operations.
Airports worldwide face growing challenges in waste management. Envac’s automatic waste collection systems directly address these challenges, removing the need for waste trucks on the apron, cutting emissions, increasing safety and enabling real-time monitoring and sustainability reporting.
Airport waste volumes have increased sharply post-pandemic, with some hubs reporting rises of up to around 30 per cent compared to pre-pandemic levels.
Organic and food-related waste can account for approximately 30–40 per cent of airport solid waste streams and is often under-recycled.
The European Union’s Fit for 55 and the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) standards emphasise greater waste segregation, traceability, and circular economy principles.
Traditional waste-handling vehicles on aprons and terminals add unnecessary emissions, noise, and safety risks.
Envac’s modular, continuously operating system serves all major airport zones, including:
Staff can dispose of waste directly at the source. From there, sealed pipes transport materials to a central collection point, minimising vehicle traffic, manual transport, and operational noise.
Airport catering facilities handle vast quantities of food and packaging waste under strict hygiene regulations. Envac’s automated kitchen waste system is purpose-built for these demanding environments, now handling more than *one million meals every day across major international airports.
Global Examples:
*Handling one million meals equates to approximately 600 tonnes of cabin and catering waste (ranging from 400 to 800 tonnes, depending on the route mix and service type). This estimate is based on International Air Transport Association (IATA) data, which show that the average cabin waste generation per passenger is approximately 0.94 kilograms, of which about 65% is food and beverage waste. These findings underscore the need for sealed, twenty-four-hour, seven-day-a-week automated systems to maintain kitchen hygiene and keep apron areas free from waste-handling vehicles.
Clean, clutter-free terminals strengthen brand image and boost traveller satisfaction. Envac helps airports maintain spotless environments by preventing bin overflow and waste-related odours.
The key outcomes:
Airports Venice, Italy
The commitment to sustainability and achieving the “zero emissions” goal by 2030 is the starting point and basis for the Envac system installed at Venice Marco Polo Airport. As the number of travellers, goods and services at airports increases, efficient waste management becomes essential for logistical, environmental and safety reasons.
Airports Doha, Qatar
At Doha’s state-of-the-art Hamad International Airport, there are five pneumatic waste collection systems that gather kitchen waste from Qatar Airlines Flight Catering, and six systems that collect mixed waste generated within the terminal building. Envac designed, built, operates, and maintains all eleven systems.
Airports Dubai, UAE
Hermetically sealed steel waste inlets throughout the kitchen’s preparation area, dishwashing area and cleaning areas are connected to Envac’s state-of-the-art pneumatic waste removal system eliminating the need for unhygienic manual waste handling.
Join the growing number of airports investing in a cleaner, smarter future.
Envac’s automatic waste collection systems are more than an upgrade; they represent a complete transformation in how airports think about waste, sustainability, and passenger experience.
Sources
At The Wilds, a multi-purpose community, ecology and events space delivered by Barking Riverside Limited, the Envac terminal is not tucked away in an anonymous shed. Instead, it sits within an award-winning building that also houses workspaces (where the Envac UK office is also located), a local café, events and, importantly, an inclusive early years setting: Barking Riverside Explorers Preschool, part of the SENspired family of services.
Cities are where the world’s biggest challenges and opportunities converge. They occupy just 2% of the Earth’s land, yet house half the global population and generate around 80% of emissions. In a time of accelerating climate change and geopolitical instability, cities are becoming the testing ground for whether we can secure clean air, reliable infrastructure and social stability. In 2025, Envac appointed its first Chief Sustainability Officer, underlining the strategic importance of sustainability for our future growth and long‑term competitiveness.
Managing waste is a significant challenge for cities worldwide. Total global waste is estimated to reach 3.88 billion tonnes by 2050 as urban populations – and their waste – continue to grow.