New and Rapidly Evolving Product Marking Regulations Across the European Union

New and Rapidly Evolving Product Marking Regulations Across the European Union

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Product compliance extends beyond the product itself to the packaging materials used to protect and display the product. Especially in the European Union, there is a wide range of EU legislation on packaging marking, which varies in interpretation and constantly changes in member states. In the following text, we have summarized the latest developments in France, Italy, and Cyprus.  

In France, the law against wastage and for a circular economy, released in February 2020, introduced significant changes in packaging marking: 

  • First, the law aimed to impose a penalty on the use of confusing marking methods. As a result, the decree declared the Green Dot a confusing label to be penalized from April 1, 2021. However, the French Supreme Administrative Court, the Conseil d’État, suspended the decree later in 2020. Therefore, the court omitted the text for the period needed (6 to 18 months) to verify its conformity with laws and treaties. In the meantime, the Green Dot cannot be considered as a confusing marking, and the penalties are not applicable. So far, the Conseil d’État has not made any decision. However, most schemes recommend that producers avoid displaying the Green Dot on packaging to minimize the risk that the decree will be declared valid after all. 
  • Then, the law extended the use of the Triman to all household packaging (excepted for glass) from January 1, 2021. The Triman was created in 2015 and, from January 1, 2017, was mandatory on packaging with a recycling channel. At that time, the meaning of Triman was to inform end-users that the packaging was recyclable. Since its extension, the Triman tells end-users that a product or packaging is subject to disposal rules.  
  • Finally, the law turned sorting instructions into a mandatory requirement for all household packaging, excepted glass, from January 1, 2022. Yet, on June 29, 2021, another decree softened the timeline by extending it to one year after the schemes received the official confirmation to communicate the documentation and signage to producers. It also plans an additional six-month transition period for products imported or manufactured before the end of the first extension. 

 

In Italy, Decree 116/2020 introduced changes to the environmental legislation, including new rules to the labeling of packaging. The new obligations established that packaging must be labeled with:  

  • Information related to separate collection, reuse, recovery, and recycling, as well as correct consumer information on the final destination of the packaging 
  • The type of packaging materials used, as per Commission Decision 97/129/EC 

 

Following industry requests for an 18-month transitional period, in May 2021, the Government decided to postpone the entry into force on the law, which gives obligated parties a transitional period until December 31, 2021, to implement the new labeling obligations.  

Lastly, Cyprus has removed the obligation to print the Green Dot on household packaging. The trademark is now only an optional marking and subject to the contract with Green Dot Cyprus. 

 

To understand and adapt to these constantly changing regulations to packaging marking, get in touch with us today! 

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Les Griffith - Speakers

Business Development Director
RLGA

Les Griffith is currently the Business Development Director at RLGA and is tasked with expanding the company’s data management offerings for packaging EPR in the Americas. Les has over 30 years of industry experience in Environmental Services, Extended Producer Responsibility and Reverse Distribution. Les has spent these last 30 years working with organizations to develop progressively more sustainable solutions to the management of end-of-life materials. Prior to joining RLG, Les spent eleven years at Covanta most recently serving as the Business Development Director for the Healthcare Solutions division. His group covered North and Central America and specialized in providing a suite of services to healthcare PROs, take-back services to retail pharmacy and law enforcement and environmental services to the healthcare sector and reverse distributors. Prior to Covanta Les spent 10 years at Waste Management Inc. as an Area Manager for their Healthcare Solutions group.

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Andriana Kontovrakis - Speakers

Director of Compliance Services
RLG

Andriana Kontovrakis is the Director of Compliance Services for Reverse Logistics Group’s US team.  She manages a team responsible for ensuring manufacturer and retailer customer compliance with EPR laws for electronics, batteries, packaging, household hazardous wastes, and other consumer products across the US. Along with RLG partner the Household and Commercial Products Association, she is spearheading the development of the Household Product Stewardship Alliance, a stewardship organization forming under the guidelines of Vermont’s HHW EPR law.  Prior to working with RLG, she was a Policy Analyst with the global electronics recycler Sims Lifecycle Solutions where she managed programmatic implementation and customer and supplier accounts for the US EPR compliance unit and the Deputy Director for Waste Prevention for the NYC Department of Sanitation.

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