Home breadcru News breadcru Sustainability breadcru Reconomy launches 5-year roadmap for textile EPR compliance

Reconomy launches 5-year roadmap for textile EPR compliance

17 Jul '25
2 min read
Reconomy launches 5-year roadmap for textile EPR compliance
Pic: Shutterstock

Insights

  • Reconomy's Textile EPR Strategy 2030 outlines a five-year roadmap to help businesses navigate evolving textile regulations.
  • It highlighted upcoming policy timelines, eco-modulation, Digital Product Passports, and the shift towards circular models.
  • The strategy focuses on operational readiness, cross-sector partnerships, and advanced data use.
Reconomy has published a new global strategy paper titled ‘Textile EPR Strategy 2030’, outlining a comprehensive five-year roadmap for navigating the evolving global landscape of Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) for textiles. The roadmap provides an overview of anticipated policy timelines and evolving requirements, while detailing how businesses can prepare for upcoming changes and leverage its strategic initiatives across Europe and worldwide.

The new EPR legislation is driving a structural shift by making producers responsible for end-of-life management, including collection, reuse, recycling, and disposal—accelerating the move towards circular business models and sustainable production patterns.

Rather than viewing this as a compliance burden, the strategy framed the transition as an opportunity for innovation and competitive advantage. By supporting stakeholders in aligning regulatory obligations with business goals, it aims to foster more resilient and future-ready operations that respond to growing demands from consumers, retailers, and policymakers.

Key themes in the strategy included eco-modulation, Digital Product Passports, and the increasing need for reliable data and supply chain transparency. In the short term, during the ‘pre-EPR’ phase, the focus is on helping clients assess regulatory impact, prepare operationally, build strong partnerships across the textile ecosystem—including sorters and recyclers—and invest in technologies to manage data and material flows efficiently.

Looking ahead, as EPR legislation becomes established across all EU member states and other global markets, the plan includes ongoing support for multi-jurisdictional compliance, especially in regions such as North America. It also emphasises the use of product-level data to drive design innovation and accelerate the adoption of circular business models.

ALCHEMPro News Desk (SG)

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