NG-EPRVoluntary EPR with mandatory rollout planned by end-2026 for plastic packaging

National Environmental (Sanitation and Wastes Control) Regulations 2009 (S.I. 28 of 2009); NESREA National EPR Programme guidelines for the electrical/electronics sector (2016) and for the packaging (food and beverage) sector (2014); draft National Environmental (Plastic Waste Control) Regulations 2025 to 2026

Nigeria · National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA), under the Federal Ministry of Environment

Nigeria's National EPR Programme is run by NESREA under the 2009 Environmental Sanitation Regulations and sector guidelines, currently on a largely voluntary basis for electronics and food and beverage packaging. NESREA is finalising National Environmental (Plastic Waste Control) Regulations that will move plastic packaging EPR to mandatory compliance with annual collection, recovery and recycling targets.

Category
Extended Producer Responsibility
Enforcement
Voluntary today, becoming Mandatory for plastics
Effective date
Sanitation and Wastes Control Regulations effective 2009; NESREA EPR programme operational from 2014 for food and beverage and from 2016 for EEE; mandatory plastic regulations targeted before end of 2026
Covered entities
Producers, importers and distributors of electrical and electronic equipment, food and beverage packaging, and plastic packaging operating in Nigeria
Notes
Penalties under the draft regulations include fines of NGN 1,000,000 plus NGN 50,000 per day of continued breach.

Sources

Verified 2026-04-30

Related regulations

Nigeria-ISSB

Local adoption of IFRS S1 / S2 (ISSB Standards)

Nigeria · Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria (FRCN)
March 2024 adoption roadmap issued; voluntary application from 2024, mandatory phased application from 2028

The Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria issued a March 2024 roadmap adopting IFRS S1 and S2, with voluntary application open from 2024 and mandatory application phased from 2028 for public interest entities and from 2030 for SMEs.

Enforcement
Mandatory
Effective date
Voluntary: annual reporting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2024. Mandatory: 1 January 2028 for public interest entities; 1 January 2030 for SMEs
Covered entities
Public interest entities as defined in the Financial Reporting Act 2011 (governments and government organisations, listed entities, regulated non-listed entities, public limited companies, holding companies of public or regulated entities, concession entities, privatised entities with government interest, government contractors above N1 billion, government licensees, and entities with annual turnover of N30 billion or more), and SMEs in a later phase
IFRS Foundation profile ↗Verified 2026-04-30
In force; PPWR replaces Directive 94/62/EC and applies from 12 August 2026

The EU runs product-specific EPR regimes for packaging, electrical and electronic equipment, batteries, vehicles and single-use plastics, putting collection, recycling and recycled-content obligations on producers placing goods on the single market. The 2025 Packaging Regulation tightens recyclability, reuse and recycled-content rules and applies directly in all Member States from August 2026.

Enforcement
Mandatory
Effective date
PPWR entered into force 11 February 2025, general application 12 August 2026; Battery Regulation entered into force 17 August 2023 with phased obligations through 2027; WEEE Directive in force since 2012; SUP Directive transposition deadline 3 July 2021
Covered entities
Producers, importers and distributors placing packaging, EEE, batteries, vehicles or single-use plastic products on the EU market, regardless of material or origin
Primary source ↗Verified 2026-04-30
In force; pEPR fee invoicing started October 2025

The UK runs separate producer responsibility regimes for packaging, electrical equipment, batteries and end-of-life vehicles, with producers paying fees to fund household collection and recycling. The 2024 pEPR rules shift the full net cost of household packaging waste onto large producers, replacing the previous shared-cost PRN system.

Enforcement
Mandatory
Effective date
pEPR Regulations made December 2024, in force 1 January 2025; first reporting year 1 April 2025 to 31 March 2026; WEEE Regs since 1 January 2014; Battery Regs since 5 May 2009
Covered entities
Packaging producers with turnover above GBP 1 million and handling more than 25 tonnes of packaging per year (lower threshold for small producers); WEEE producers placing EEE on the UK market; battery and ELV producers
Primary source ↗Verified 2026-04-30
In force; VREG amended 2022 to extend scope to all EEE

Switzerland operates advance disposal fee (vRG) schemes for electrical and electronic equipment, batteries, glass bottles and PET, run by industry organisations (SENS, SWICO, Inobat, PET-Recycling Schweiz) under federal ordinances. Packaging EPR for paper, cardboard and plastic remains largely voluntary, organised through municipal collection.

Enforcement
Mandatory
Effective date
VREG in force since 1 July 1998, revised scope effective 1 January 2022; VVEA effective 1 January 2016; battery and glass advance disposal fees in place since the 1990s
Covered entities
Manufacturers, importers and retailers of electrical and electronic equipment, batteries, glass and PET beverage containers placing products on the Swiss market
Primary source ↗Verified 2026-04-30
In force; revised packaging EPR rules applied from 1 July 2025

Norway implements EU-style EPR through Avfallsforskriften, requiring producers of packaging, EEE, batteries and vehicles to join a Producer Responsibility Organisation approved by the Environment Agency. Since July 2025, the previous 1,000 kg-per-material exemption for packaging has been abolished, so every importer or producer must register and report.

Enforcement
Mandatory
Effective date
Avfallsforskriften in force since 2004; Chapter 7 packaging EPR revised effective 1 July 2025 (1,000 kg threshold removed); WEEE provisions since 1999
Covered entities
Any company that professionally imports or manufactures packaging, packaged products, EEE, batteries or vehicles for the Norwegian market; from July 2025 all packaging producers regardless of volume
Primary source ↗Verified 2026-04-30
In force; phased rollout of zero waste certification continues

Türkiye runs a national Zero Waste framework that pairs source separation rules for institutions with producer responsibility duties for packaging and electrical equipment, all administered by the Ministry of Environment, Urbanisation and Climate Change. Packaging producers must register in the zero waste information system, hit recovery targets and pay deposits or fees set under the Packaging Waste Control Regulation.

Enforcement
Mandatory
Effective date
Zero Waste Regulation effective 12 July 2019, amended 9 October 2021; Packaging Waste Control Regulation effective 26 June 2021
Covered entities
Public institutions, large commercial premises, packaging producers and importers, EEE producers; building and premises operators required to set up zero waste systems on phased schedule in annexes
Primary source ↗Verified 2026-04-30