SDG Indicator 12.2.2: Domestic material consumption, domestic material consumption per capita, and domestic material consumption per GDP

1. Key features and metadata

Definition: This indicator estimates the total amount of material (biomass, fossil fuels, metal ores, and non-metallic minerals) directly used in an economy.

Sub-indicator Disaggregated by

EN_MAT_DOMCMPT

Domestic material consumption (DMC), by type of raw material (tonnes)

Types of raw material (biomass, fossil fuels, metal ores, and non-metallic minerals)

EN_MAT_DOMCMPG

DMC per unit of GDP, by type of raw material (kilograms per constant 2015 USD)

EN_MAT_DOMCMPC

DMC per capita, by type of raw material (tonnes per capita)

Sources of information: National Statistical Offices and various national and international datasets in the domain of material flow accounts, agriculture, forestry, fisheries, mining, and energy statistics.

Related SDG Indicators: 8.4.2 (duplicates), 12.2.1 and 8.4.1 (Material footprint, material footprint per capita, and material footprint per GDP).

2. Data availability by region, SDG Global Database, as of 02 July 2025


Figure 4.27 Domestic material consumption, domestic material consumption per capita, and domestic material consumption per GDP

3. Proposed disaggregation, links to policymaking and its impact

Proposed disaggregation Link to policymaking Impact

Domestic material consumption, by type of consumption (tonnes)(UNEP 2023d; UNEP-IRP n.d.):

  • Domestic Extraction
  • Imports
  • Exports

Applies to:

  • EN_MAT_DOMCMPT

This availability of information based on this disaggregation allows for an understanding of the quantities that are used internally within the country whether the material is domestically extracted orimported. This disaggregation can be used by governments to balance the outsourcing of material and energy-intensive extraction and industrial processes to other countries (UNEP 2023d). This disaggregation is consistent with the 10YFP (UN 2012; UNEP 2024c).

Decoupling wealth creation from resource use to move towards a circular economy entails transforming the way in which a country’s basic consumption needs are met by developing an inclusive, resource-efficient and low-polluting economy. Beyond reaching environmental and economic benefits, by reducing environmentally-harmful effects anddeveloping resource-efficient solutions,decoupling policies can also generate substantial social and human wellbeing outputs (e.g. green jobs creation or reducing pollution-related illnesses (IRP 2019).