PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2063635
PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2063635
According to Mordor Intelligence, the asia-Pacific construction and demolition waste management market size was valued at USD 35.20 billion in 2025 and is estimated to grow from USD 37.60 billion in 2026 to reach USD 52.40 billion by 2031, at a CAGR of 6.87% during the forecast period (2026-2031).

This report is Segmented by Waste Type (Non-Hazardous Waste, and Hazardous Waste), by Material (Concrete & Bricks, Asphalt, and More), by Service (Collection & Transportation, Sorting & Segregation, and More), and by Geography (China, Japan, India, South Korea, ASEAN, Australia, and Rest of Asia-Pacific). Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Value in USD.
Urban growth across Asia is producing large amounts of demolition debris, excavation soil, and renovation waste. This increase is boosting the need for proper waste management services in the Asia-Pacific Construction and Demolition Waste Management market. Governments in major economies are encouraging waste producers to sort materials and ensure traceable transport, driven by policy-backed projects. This shift highlights the rising role of digital tools and on-site processing. In China, new rules for managing construction waste focus on sorting at the source and reusing materials during projects. This approach connects construction progress with recycling goals and uses multi-agency enforcement to prevent illegal dumping. By setting reuse targets and monitoring requirements, businesses are finding more reasons to adopt mobile crushing, screening, and precise sorting methods. These practices cut down on long-distance transport and support markets for recycled materials. As cities grow denser, limited access to active sites is making modular equipment and phased logistics more popular. These solutions help move materials quickly from job sites to approved recovery centers. This shift is aligning the growth of collection, sorting, and recycling systems with real-time monitoring, supported by national and local platforms in China.
By 2030, Chinese central and municipal authorities aim to comprehensively utilize bulk solid waste and standardize construction waste governance. These initiatives bolster the long-term demand for services like recycling, sorting, and traceable hauling. The State Council's 2025 action plan, along with its operational guidance, emphasizes the classified treatment of construction waste, promotes green construction practices, and mandates the integration of waste reduction costs into project budgets. Meanwhile, Vietnam's national circular economy action plan aims for high collection rates and formalizes extended producer responsibility in sectors linked to building materials, enhancing segregation and downstream processing. In China, corporate operators are collaborating with local governments to launch digital platforms that monitor waste inflows and outflows, optimizing recovery. These collaborations establish new benchmarks for reuse rates and product conversion. Taiwan is witnessing cross-sector initiatives that enhance the recovery of inorganic resources, repurposing them for uses like asphalt aggregates and controlled low-strength material. This not only stabilizes end-use outlets for recycled content in construction but also tightens the alignment between regulatory targets, public procurement, and technology adoption. Such concerted efforts fortify the Asia-Pacific Construction and Demolition Waste Management market.
In several emerging markets, uneven enforcement of construction waste rules and licensing requirements can limit diversion and slow investment in advanced recovery lines. Authorities have started to strengthen oversight through joint inspections, electronic documentation, and penalties, but consistent implementation remains a work in progress in some provinces and municipalities. China's recent guidance formalizes inter-departmental enforcement and the use of surveillance and e-waybills for construction waste, which illustrates how digital governance can curb leakage and improve compliance. Where digital tracking is not fully deployed, gaps may persist in first-mile collection and transfer, which reduces the capture of higher-value fractions and constrains revenues for material recovery operators. As regulators expand audits and standardize reporting, private service providers can better align capacity with policy direction and secure long-term contracts. Continued progress in monitoring and enforcement will support recovery targets and reduce illicit dumping risk in the Asia-Pacific Construction and Demolition Waste Management market.
Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.
In 2025, non-hazardous waste dominated the scene, capturing a 98.3% share. This dominance, driven by materials like concrete, brick, soil, asphalt, and timber from demolition and renovation activities, continues to shape investment priorities in the Asia-Pacific Construction and Demolition Waste Management market. Assessments in Japanese cities reveal that concrete blocks lead the non-hazardous stream. Moreover, structured separation techniques boost yields for aggregates, metals, and wood. Public agencies with dedicated crushing capacities have shown that, with high-quality upstream sorting, concrete and rock can be recycled into engineered fill for infrastructure and reclamation projects. However, these recycling pathways hinge on efficient logistics management and quality assurance processes that check for gradation, contaminants, and performance standards. Mobile pre-processing at sites offers significant advantages for non-hazardous streams, cutting down haul distances and ensuring a consistent feedstock size for downstream plants. Such efficiencies bolster the Asia-Pacific Construction and Demolition Waste Management market, aligning collection, sorting, and high-volume recycling with policy-driven utilization goals.
While hazardous waste made up a mere 1.7% share in 2025, it's set to grow at a robust 7.1% CAGR through 2031. This growth is largely due to heightened enforcement on materials like asbestos, lead-based coatings, and contaminated soils in the Asia-Pacific Construction and Demolition Waste Management market. Regional regulators have tightened asbestos handling rules, with some areas outright banning it and mandating licensed contractors for its removal, transport, and disposal. Highlighting the issue, health authorities in Indonesia have pointed out the ongoing use of asbestos-containing materials and the resultant public health challenges, bolstering the case for future restrictions and the need for specialized disposal facilities. In markets with stringent compliance, practices like clear labeling, chain-of-custody controls, and dedicated landfill cells or treatment routes have become the norm. As monitoring intensifies and enforcement tightens, the identification and routing of hazardous waste volumes improve, enhancing safety and minimizing cross-contamination with non-hazardous processing lines. Such measures not only boost compliance but also open doors for specialized services in the Asia-Pacific Construction and Demolition Waste Management market.