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sustainable products law norway

Our Expert in Norway

What Norway's 2026 Act on Sustainable Products and Value Chains Means for Manufacturers, Waste Operators and In‑house Counsel

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Norway’s sustainable products law is reshaping compliance obligations across the country’s manufacturing and waste-management sectors in 2026. The Act on Sustainable Products and Value Chains introduces binding requirements for product design, labelling, reporting and extended producer responsibility (EPR) that apply to every business placing goods on the Norwegian market. Parallel EEA/EFTA enforcement activity and a maturing climate-litigation landscape add further urgency: operators who delay their compliance response face regulatory penalties, market-access restrictions and growing civil liability exposure. This guide translates the statute’s key provisions into practical, sector-specific action steps for compliance officers, environmental managers and in-house legal teams.

  • Manufacturers: Audit product design, update technical documentation and revise supplier contracts to meet new ecodesign, labelling and reporting standards.
  • Waste operators & EPR schemes: Align collection and recycling processes with revised producer-responsibility financing models and tightened recycling targets.
  • In‑house counsel: Map the Act’s interaction with the Pollution Control Act, the Product Control Act and the Transparency Act, then build a phased compliance roadmap with clear board-reporting milestones.

What the Act on Sustainable Products Covers, Scope and Who Is Affected

The Act on Sustainable Products and Value Chains is the legislative centrepiece of Norway’s circular-economy agenda. It empowers the government to adopt delegated regulations on product sustainability requirements, covering durability, repairability, recyclability, hazardous-substance content, energy efficiency and information disclosure, for virtually any product category placed on the Norwegian market. The statute draws directly on the EU Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) framework and is designed for implementation through the EEA Agreement, ensuring regulatory alignment between Norway and the EU single market.

The Act’s territorial reach extends to all actors in a product’s value chain within Norway, including those importing goods from non-EEA countries. Its enforcement mechanisms, administrative fines, product recalls, market bans and coercive daily penalties, are calibrated to mirror the sanctions available under EU product-safety legislation.

Definitions and Territorial Scope

Understanding who falls within the Act’s perimeter is the first compliance task. The statute uses three core definitions that determine obligation sets:

  • Producer: Any natural or legal person who manufactures a product or has a product designed or manufactured and markets it under their own name or trademark, or who imports a product into the EEA for the first time.
  • Placing on the market: The first making-available of a product on the Norwegian (or EEA) market, whether by manufacture, import or distribution.
  • Value chain: All stages of a product’s lifecycle from raw-material extraction through design, production, transport, use and end-of-life treatment, including the activities of suppliers, subcontractors and waste operators.

Interaction with Other Laws: Pollution Control Act, Product Control Act and Transparency Act

The Act on Sustainable Products does not operate in isolation. Norway already maintains a robust environmental-regulatory architecture, and the new statute intersects with at least three existing frameworks that compliance teams must cross-reference.

The Pollution Control Act (Forurensningsloven) governs environmental permits and emissions-based obligations. Where the new Act imposes product-design constraints that affect manufacturing processes, for example, requiring the elimination of certain hazardous substances, operators may need to amend existing pollution permits or update environmental impact assessments.

The Product Control Act (Produktkontrolloven) provides the enforcement backbone for product bans, recalls and coercive fines. Regulatory authorities can invoke Product Control Act powers to remove non-compliant goods from the market, making it the operational enforcement tool for breaches of sustainable-product requirements.

The Transparency Act (Åpenhetsloven), which already requires larger enterprises to conduct human-rights and environmental due diligence across their supply chains, now shares significant overlap with the new Act’s value-chain obligations. In-house teams should coordinate Transparency Act reporting with sustainable-product due diligence to avoid duplication and ensure consistent disclosures.

Key Obligations Under Norway’s Sustainable Products Law for Manufacturers

The Act translates broad sustainability ambitions into concrete operational requirements. Manufacturers must prepare for obligations in three interconnected areas: product design and lifecycle management, labelling and data reporting, and supply-chain due diligence. Each area demands changes to existing systems, contracts and internal processes.

Design and Ecodesign Obligations

At the heart of the Act is a shift from voluntary sustainability commitments to enforceable design standards. Products placed on the Norwegian market will progressively need to satisfy minimum requirements for durability, repairability, recyclability and resource efficiency. These requirements will be specified in delegated regulations adopted under the Act, mirroring the product-category approach used in the EU’s Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation.

Industry observers expect the first delegated regulations to target product categories where the EU has already advanced its own ecodesign rules, electronics and ICT equipment, textiles, and packaging. For electronics manufacturers, the likely practical effect will be mandatory design-for-disassembly features, minimum recycled-content thresholds and restrictions on the use of certain flame retardants and plasticisers. For packaging producers, the emphasis will fall on recyclability-by-design criteria and the phasing out of composite materials that frustrate mechanical recycling.

Offshore-equipment manufacturers, a sector of particular significance in Norway, should anticipate product-specific delegated rules addressing the material composition and end-of-life management of subsea components, coatings and single-use operational materials. Early indications suggest that the Norwegian Environment Agency will consult on sector-specific implementation timelines for such categories.

Sector Likely new obligation Practical first step
Electronics & ICT Design-for-disassembly, minimum recycled content, hazardous-substance restrictions Conduct a bill-of-materials audit against anticipated substance-restriction lists
Packaging Recyclability-by-design criteria, composite-material phase-out, labelling of material composition Map current packaging formats against recyclability criteria and identify non-compliant SKUs
Offshore equipment End-of-life management plans, material-composition declarations for subsea components Inventory coatings, single-use materials and composite components; engage with EPR scheme operators

Labelling, Declarations and Data Reporting

The Act introduces a framework for mandatory product information disclosure. Depending on the delegated regulations adopted for each product category, manufacturers may need to provide standardised labels disclosing material composition, recycled content, repairability scores and end-of-life handling instructions. Where digital product passports (DPPs) are required, as anticipated for electronics, batteries and textiles, manufacturers must embed machine-readable data carriers (such as QR codes) on the product or its packaging, linked to a structured dataset accessible to regulators, waste operators and consumers.

Compliance teams should begin integrating sustainability data fields into existing ERP and product-lifecycle management (PLM) systems now. Required data points are likely to include: material weight by component, percentage of recycled content, hazardous-substance declarations, and expected product lifespan or warranty period. Annual reporting to the Norwegian Environment Agency on volumes placed on the market and recycling outcomes is also anticipated.

Supplier Contracts and Supply-Chain Due Diligence

The value-chain scope of the Act means manufacturers cannot outsource compliance risk to suppliers without corresponding contractual safeguards. In-house counsel should review and update supplier agreements to include clauses addressing:

  • Material-composition warranties: Require suppliers to warrant that supplied materials and components conform to substance restrictions and recycled-content requirements applicable under Norwegian law.
  • Audit rights: Reserve the right to inspect supplier production facilities and request documentary evidence of compliance (certificates of analysis, third-party test reports, chain-of-custody records).
  • Indemnification for regulatory non-compliance: Allocate the risk of fines, recalls or market bans arising from upstream non-compliance to the responsible supplier.

A practical model clause might read: “The Supplier warrants that all products, components and materials supplied under this agreement comply with applicable requirements of the Norwegian Act on Sustainable Products and Value Chains and any delegated regulations adopted thereunder. The Supplier shall provide, upon request, documentary evidence of such compliance within [10] business days.”

Supplier due diligence should be coordinated with Transparency Act assessments. Where a manufacturer already conducts supply-chain due diligence for human-rights and environmental impacts under the Transparency Act, the sustainable-product diligence process can leverage the same supplier questionnaires, audit calendars and risk-mapping tools, reducing duplication while strengthening coverage.

What Waste Operators and EPR Schemes Must Do Under Norway’s Sustainable Products Law

The Act fundamentally recalibrates the relationship between producers, EPR scheme operators and waste-management companies. It reinforces the polluter-pays principle by strengthening producer responsibility for the full lifecycle cost of products placed on the Norwegian market, including collection, sorting, recycling and disposal. For waste operators, this means revised intake criteria, tighter documentation requirements and, in many cases, renegotiated service agreements with EPR schemes.

Producer Responsibility and Financing Models

Under the Act, producers are financially responsible for the end-of-life management of their products. This obligation is typically discharged by joining an approved EPR scheme, such as those operated by established entities in the Norwegian market. The Act empowers the government to set collection and recycling targets for specific product categories and to require EPR schemes to report annually on target achievement.

The likely practical effect for producers is an increase in EPR fees. As recycling targets tighten and the Act introduces eco-modulated fee structures, where producers of more recyclable products pay lower fees, cost allocation will become a significant commercial negotiation point. Producers should engage with their EPR scheme operators early to understand fee-trajectory modelling, negotiate eco-modulation credits and, where possible, secure multi-year fee agreements that provide budget certainty.

For importers and distributors who are classified as “producers” under the Act (because they first place a product on the Norwegian market), the obligation to join an EPR scheme and pay fees applies equally. Compliance teams at import-dependent businesses should confirm their registration status with the relevant EPR scheme and ensure their product-volume declarations are accurate and up to date.

Operational Impacts for Waste Operators

Waste operators, whether municipal or private, face operational changes across intake, sorting, treatment and reporting. The Act’s emphasis on circular-economy outcomes means that waste operators will need to demonstrate higher sorting purity, lower contamination rates and better material-recovery yields. Specific operational adjustments include updating waste-intake criteria to align with new product-category definitions, investing in sorting infrastructure to handle products designed for disassembly and recycling, and implementing hazardous-substance screening protocols for product categories subject to substance restrictions under the Act.

Documentation is a critical compliance area. Waste operators must maintain treatment records sufficient to demonstrate compliance with recycling and recovery targets. These records should capture waste volumes received (by product category and EPR scheme), treatment method applied, recycling output volumes, and any hazardous-substance notifications filed with the Norwegian Environment Agency. Regulatory audits are anticipated to focus on the accuracy and completeness of these records.

Entity type Reporting / documentation obligations Enforcement risk / timeline
Manufacturer / Producer Product composition data, technical dossier, design documentation, labelling records, annual volume and recycling reports High, documentation obligations apply first; failure may trigger market restrictions or fines (immediate to 6 months)
Importer / Distributor Import declarations, evidence of supplier due diligence, labelling compliance, EPR scheme registration confirmation Medium, compliance checks and possible recall risk upon market surveillance
Waste operator / EPR scheme Collection and recycling data, treatment records, hazardous-substances notifications, annual target-achievement reports Medium/High, compliance with recycling targets and hazardous-substance rules; subject to regulatory audits

Environmental Licensing and Permitting Implications

One of the less immediately obvious consequences of the Act on Sustainable Products is its downstream effect on environmental licensing under Norway’s Pollution Control Act. Manufacturers and waste operators whose activities require pollution permits should assess whether the new sustainable-product obligations necessitate permit amendments or updated environmental-impact documentation.

When to Apply for a Permit Amendment

A permit amendment is likely required when the Act’s delegated regulations impose substance restrictions or material-composition requirements that change the inputs or outputs of a permitted manufacturing process. For example, if a packaging manufacturer must eliminate a particular polymer additive to comply with recyclability-by-design criteria, and this substitution alters the facility’s emissions profile or waste-stream composition, the existing pollution permit may no longer accurately describe the operation. The Pollution Control Act requires permit holders to notify the Norwegian Environment Agency of material changes to permitted activities, failure to do so constitutes a standalone regulatory breach.

Waste operators receiving new product categories under expanded EPR schemes should similarly review their treatment permits. A facility permitted for mechanical recycling of a specific polymer type may need an amended permit, or a new one, to accept and process mixed-material products that were previously outside its scope.

How to Draft Permit Addenda Addressing Sustainable-Product Obligations

When preparing a permit-amendment application or a voluntary permit addendum, compliance teams should address the following elements tied to the Act’s requirements:

  • Updated process description: Describe how the manufacturing or waste-treatment process has changed (or will change) in response to ecodesign requirements, substance restrictions or expanded product-category intake.
  • Revised emissions inventory: Recalculate air, water and waste emissions to reflect substituted materials, new processing steps or changed throughput volumes.
  • Monitoring plan amendments: Propose updated monitoring parameters and frequencies that capture the environmental effects of the process change.
  • Hazardous-substance management: Where the Act restricts or phases out specific substances, document the transition plan and timeline for eliminating those substances from the permitted process.

Industry observers expect the Norwegian Environment Agency to issue guidance on the intersection between the Act’s delegated regulations and Pollution Control Act permit conditions. Compliance teams should monitor Agency publications and consultation rounds for their specific product categories.

Enforcement, EEA/EFTA Oversight and Climate Litigation Risk

The enforcement architecture for Norway’s sustainable products law operates on two levels: domestic regulatory enforcement by the Norwegian Environment Agency (and product-safety authorities invoking the Product Control Act), and supranational oversight by the EFTA Surveillance Authority (ESA) under the EEA Agreement. To this, practitioners must add a third, rapidly evolving dimension, climate litigation brought by private parties, NGOs and affected communities.

Domestically, enforcement tools include administrative fines, coercive daily penalties (tvangsmulkt), product recalls, market bans and orders to cease non-compliant production. The Product Control Act provides the legal basis for immediate market-intervention measures, while the Pollution Control Act authorises environmental-permit enforcement. The EFTA Surveillance Authority monitors Norway’s transposition and application of EEA-relevant legislation, and ESA enforcement notices can trigger infringement proceedings where Norway fails to implement or enforce the Act’s requirements effectively.

The climate-litigation landscape adds a further layer of compliance risk. Norway’s Supreme Court has considered the government’s obligations under the Constitution’s environmental-rights provision (Article 112), and matters at the European Court of Human Rights have explored state responsibility for climate-related harm. While these cases primarily target government policy, industry observers expect their reasoning to influence the standard of care applied to corporate environmental obligations, particularly in permit-review proceedings and civil-liability disputes. Companies whose products or operations contribute materially to pollution or resource depletion should anticipate that plaintiffs will invoke sustainability-law standards as benchmarks in private litigation.

Practical Enforcement Mitigation

Proactive compliance is the most cost-effective mitigation strategy. Businesses should implement the following measures to reduce enforcement exposure under the sustainable products law in Norway:

  • Internal compliance audits: Conduct annual audits of product-design documentation, labelling accuracy and EPR-scheme participation. Document findings and remediation actions in a compliance register accessible to regulators on request.
  • Record retention: Maintain all technical dossiers, supplier due-diligence records, substance-test reports and EPR-scheme correspondence for a minimum of ten years, the standard retention period for environmental-regulatory records in Norway.
  • Recall readiness: Establish a product-recall plan that can be activated within 48 hours of a regulatory order. The plan should designate responsible personnel, identify distribution channels for recall notices, and pre-arrange logistics for product return and safe disposal.
  • EEA monitoring: Assign a team member to monitor EFTA Surveillance Authority publications for enforcement notices, reasoned opinions and infringement proceedings relevant to Norway’s implementation of sustainable-product rules.

Litigation Checklist for Counsel

When enforcement action or litigation is initiated, whether by a regulator, an NGO or a private claimant, in-house counsel should take the following immediate steps:

  • Preserve all documents: Issue a litigation-hold notice covering all product-design files, supplier correspondence, EPR-scheme records, environmental-permit documentation and internal compliance-audit reports.
  • Engage specialist environmental counsel: Sustainable-product and climate-litigation cases require practitioners with experience in both regulatory enforcement and constitutional/human-rights environmental law. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory provides access to qualified environmental litigators in Norway.
  • Notify insurers: Review product-liability, environmental-liability and directors-and-officers (D&O) insurance policies. Notify insurers promptly, many policies impose strict notification deadlines that, if missed, void coverage.
  • Assess cross-border exposure: If the same product is placed on multiple EEA markets, consider whether enforcement in Norway could trigger parallel proceedings in other jurisdictions or at the ESA level.
  • Commission an independent compliance review: An external audit conducted promptly after receiving notice of an investigation or claim can identify remediation opportunities and demonstrate good faith to regulators, factors that may reduce penalty severity.

Practical Compliance Roadmap and Checklist for In‑House Counsel

The following 12-step roadmap translates the Act’s requirements into a phased implementation plan. Timelines assume the date the relevant delegated regulations for a company’s product category enter into force as “Day 1.”

  1. Days 1–30: Regulatory mapping. Identify which delegated regulations apply to your product categories. Cross-reference with existing Pollution Control Act permits and Product Control Act obligations.
  2. Days 1–30: Stakeholder identification. Designate a compliance lead and assemble a cross-functional team (legal, product design, procurement, environmental health & safety, finance).
  3. Days 30–60: Gap analysis. Compare current product-design standards, labelling practices and supplier contracts against the Act’s requirements. Document gaps in a compliance register.
  4. Days 30–60: EPR scheme review. Confirm registration with the applicable EPR scheme. Verify product-volume declarations and review fee structures, including eco-modulation opportunities.
  5. Days 60–90: Supplier engagement. Issue updated supplier questionnaires covering material composition, substance restrictions and recycled-content requirements. Schedule supplier audits for high-risk categories.
  6. Days 60–90: Contract redlining. Update standard supplier agreements with material-composition warranties, audit-right clauses and indemnification provisions aligned with the Act.
  7. Month 3–6: Design remediation. Initiate product-design changes for non-compliant SKUs. Prioritise products with the highest market volume or the greatest gap to compliance.
  8. Month 3–6: Labelling and data-system integration. Configure ERP/PLM systems to capture required sustainability data fields. Develop or procure digital product passport (DPP) infrastructure where required.
  9. Month 6–12: Permit review. Assess whether process changes trigger Pollution Control Act permit amendments. Prepare and submit amendment applications with updated emissions inventories and monitoring plans.
  10. Month 6–12: Training and internal communication. Train product-development, procurement and operations teams on new obligations. Update internal compliance manuals and standard operating procedures.
  11. Month 12–24: First reporting cycle. Submit annual reports to the Norwegian Environment Agency and EPR scheme operators. Conduct a post-reporting internal audit to identify and correct data-quality issues.
  12. Month 12–24: Board reporting and continuous improvement. Present compliance-status reports to the board. Establish a continuous-monitoring programme to track regulatory developments, EFTA enforcement trends and litigation precedents.

Board briefing bullet points (sample):

  • The Act on Sustainable Products and Value Chains imposes binding ecodesign, labelling and EPR obligations on products placed on the Norwegian market.
  • Non-compliance risk includes administrative fines, product recalls, market bans and growing civil-liability exposure linked to climate litigation.
  • A phased 24-month compliance programme is under way; key milestones include supplier-contract updates (Month 3), product-design remediation (Month 6) and first regulatory reporting (Month 12).
  • Budget allocation is required for ERP/PLM system upgrades, supplier audits and potential permit-amendment applications.

Conclusion: Priority Steps Under Norway’s Sustainable Products Law

The regulatory trends shaping Norway in 2026 demand a proactive, structured response. The Act on Sustainable Products and Value Chains is not a distant legislative aspiration, it is an operational reality that imposes enforceable obligations on manufacturers, importers, distributors and waste operators today. Three priority legal steps should anchor every compliance programme: first, complete a regulatory-mapping exercise to identify applicable delegated regulations and their interaction with existing permits; second, update supplier contracts and internal documentation systems to capture the data required for labelling, reporting and EPR compliance; and third, establish a litigation-readiness framework that accounts for the growing intersection between climate litigation and sustainable-product standards.

Businesses that address these priorities methodically will not merely avoid penalties, they will secure competitive advantage in a market that increasingly rewards circular-economy compliance. For further resources, consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with qualified environmental practitioners in Norway.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Cathrine Hambro at BULL, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Regjeringen, Action Plan for a Circular Economy
  2. Norwegian Environment Agency, Waste Regulations: Packaging and Packaging Waste
  3. EFTA Surveillance Authority (ESA)
  4. Thommessen, Sustainability and ESG in 2026: 8 Regulatory Trends
  5. Norway Product Control Act Overview, NetZeroCompare
  6. CMS Expert Guide, Plastics and Packaging Laws: Norway
  7. Karnov Group, Introduction to Sustainability Law (Norway)
  8. Norsirk, EPR Scheme Operator (Norway)

FAQs

What is the Act on Sustainable Products and Value Chains and when does it apply?
The Act is Norway’s framework legislation empowering the government to set binding sustainability requirements, covering design, labelling, substance restrictions and extended producer responsibility, for products placed on the Norwegian market. The Act is being implemented in 2026, with delegated regulations specifying obligations for individual product categories to follow on a rolling basis as adopted by the government.
Yes. Manufacturers will need to meet ecodesign criteria (durability, repairability, recyclability, recycled content) and provide standardised product labels disclosing material composition and end-of-life handling instructions. Where digital product passports are required, machine-readable data carriers must be embedded on the product or packaging.
The Act strengthens the polluter-pays principle by requiring producers to finance the collection, sorting, recycling and disposal of their products through approved EPR schemes. Eco-modulated fee structures are anticipated, meaning producers of more recyclable products will pay lower fees, while those placing hard-to-recycle products on the market will face higher costs.
Industry observers expect that reasoning from Norwegian Supreme Court and ECHR climate cases will increasingly influence permit-review proceedings and civil-liability standards. Companies whose products or operations contribute to pollution or resource depletion should prepare for plaintiffs invoking sustainability-law benchmarks in private claims.
The Norwegian Environment Agency and product-safety authorities enforce the Act domestically, with powers including administrative fines, coercive daily penalties, product recalls and market bans. At the supranational level, the EFTA Surveillance Authority monitors Norway’s implementation under the EEA Agreement and may initiate infringement proceedings for non-compliance.
Start with a regulatory-mapping exercise to identify applicable delegated regulations. Then conduct a gap analysis, update supplier contracts, configure data systems for new reporting requirements, and assess whether manufacturing or waste-treatment changes require pollution-permit amendments. A 12-step phased roadmap, from immediate stakeholder identification through 24-month board reporting, is recommended.
The primary source is the Norwegian government’s official publications portal (Regjeringen.no), where the action plan for a circular economy and related legislative proposals are published in both Norwegian and English. The Norwegian Environment Agency also publishes operational guidance on waste regulations and EPR requirements.
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What Norway's 2026 Act on Sustainable Products and Value Chains Means for Manufacturers, Waste Operators and In‑house Counsel

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