Ecodesign entails the integration of environmental considerations into product development, aiming to create goods with the lowest possible environmental impact throughout their life cycle.
EU manufacturers already have to align with ecodesign rules for energy-related products, such as heaters, refrigerators, vacuum cleaners or computers, reducing energy consumption and negative environmental effects in the design stage. The EU now wants to go a step further and introduce ecodesign rules for almost every product.
New rules for eco-friendly products
In March 2022, the European Commission proposed a new ecodesign regulation that would significantly broaden the scope of products it applies to. It would also introduce additional requirements and minimum standards for durability, reparability, energy efficiency and recycling.
A Digital Product Passport should accompany products, providing consumers with all the relevant information needed to help them make informed decisions.
Council adopts position on ecodesign requirements |
Digital Product Passport
- providing information on performance, traceability, technical documentation, harmful chemicals, user manuals etc.
- providing information on the environmental impact of the purchase
- making products easier to repair or recycle
In addition, the new rules aim to stop the destruction of unsold products, promote green public procurement and provide incentives, like eco vouchers or green taxation, to encourage people to buy eco-friendly products.
Parliament’s position on the ecodesign rules
MEPs welcomed the proposal, but also want:
- to forbid manufactures from limiting the durability of products and making them prematurely obsolete
- to prioritise ecodesign requirements for some products (iron, steel, aluminium, textiles, furniture, tyres, detergents, paints, chemicals…)
- to ban the destruction of unsold textiles and footwear, and electrical and electronic equipment
- to set up a public online platform to compare information from the product passports
Next steps
In June 2023, MEPs from the environment committee adopted the report defining Parliament’s position for negotiations on the legislation with EU governments. Parliament is expected to greenlight its position during the plenary session in July 2023.
More information: European Parliament
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