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Circularity and Carbon: Stable Regulatory Priorities in 2025 and 2026


TL;DR

Circularity and carbon policies remain stable and continue maturing through 2025–2026. Key impacts include expanded EPR laws, Digital Product Passports (DPP), greenwashing rules, CBAM updates, and new waste, recycling, and repair regulations across the EU, USA, Canada, China, and other regions. Companies must integrate sustainability into product design, sourcing, manufacturing, and end-of-life strategies, supported by traceability and data systems.

Circularity and EPR Developments in 2025

In 2025, multiple jurisdictions expanded EPR frameworks, especially for packaging and textiles. These laws commonly include producer-funded waste management, eco-modulated fees, recyclability targets, and incentives for circular design.

Key Legislative Updates:

Right-to-Repair Laws Strengthen Worldwide

Repairability and product lifetime extension remain a central circularity strategy. Key updates:

Taxes and Controls on Small Parcels and Fast Fashion

Governments are tightening controls on low-value imports to reduce the environmental footprint associated with fast fashion, transportation, packaging waste, and end-of-life management.

Examples:

Global Greenwashing and Environmental Claims

Regulations Regulators continue addressing misleading sustainability claims.

Major developments:

Digital Product Passports (DPP)

DPPs are becoming a core feature of EU sustainability legislation. They support accuracy, traceability, and lifecycle information.

Key milestones:

Carbon Tax and Border Adjustment Measures

Carbon-pricing mechanisms remain central to climate strategy.

Updates:

What’s Coming in 2026

Key timelines for 2026 include:

USA EPR PROGRAM DEADLINES

EU REGULATORY DEADLINES

ADDITIONAL ITEMS TO WATCH

What Companies Must Do in 2026

Sustainability and product compliance are converging. Companies must integrate circularity, carbon management, and legal compliance into every lifecycle stage.

Key priorities:

FAQ

What are the biggest regulatory changes in 2026 for circularity? Key changes include the EU ban on destruction of unsold textiles, mandatory French textile environmental labeling, multiple US states activating packaging/textile EPR programs, and new PFAS limits in EU food-contact packaging.

When do Digital Product Passports become mandatory? First wave begins in 2026 (construction materials, iron, steel), expanding to textiles, batteries, and aluminum in 2027.

How does CBAM change in 2026? The EU introduces a 50tonne mass-based threshold and removes indirect emissions from cost calculations for iron, steel, and aluminum.

What must companies do to prepare for stricter sustainability rules? Strengthen product traceability, circular design, data collection, supplier engagement, and documentation to meet EPR, DPP, CBAM, and environmental claims requirements.


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