What ESPR means for planning today
ESPR is a framework that triggers concrete requirements through product-group delegated acts. Companies therefore need to prepare product groups, data sources and evidence so later required fields do not start from zero.
The consulting work turns regulatory uncertainty into a prioritised roadmap: which product lines are likely relevant, which data is reusable and which decisions should wait for delegated acts?
Roadmap building blocks
Nulara separates reliable foundations from open delegated-act details. The result is not false precision, but robust preparation.
- Product portfolio: Mapping against ESPR priorities, industries and existing data maturity.
- Data fields: Preparation of stable data classes such as product identity, materials, repairability, evidence and access layers.
- Monitoring: Process for changes through working plans, delegated acts and standardisation.
- Rollout: Sequence for pilot, data model, supplier request, approval and publication.
Consulting outcome
- ESPR product-group and priority matrix
- Roadmap for data fields, evidence and system integration
- Monitoring process for delegated acts
- Decision brief for pilot product groups
Sources and next steps
The ESPR roadmap uses official EU sources and separates fixed obligations from open delegated-act details.
Nulara deep dives
- ESPR - Regulatory overview of the Ecodesign Regulation.
- ESPR Applicability Check - First assessment of possible ESPR relevance.
- Industries - ESPR-relevant product groups by industrial context.
Primary sources
- European Commission: ESPR - Official overview of the ESPR framework and implementation through working plans.
- EUR-Lex: Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 - Legal basis for ESPR, ecodesign and product passports.
ESPR roadmap consulting FAQ
- Can Nulara name final ESPR data fields?
- Only where they are legally fixed. For many product groups, concrete data fields will be defined through delegated acts.
- Why start now anyway?
- Product identity, data sources, evidence, roles and supplier processes need lead time and are reusable across several DPP scenarios.
- Is the roadmap industry-specific?
- Yes. Textiles, batteries, electronics, furniture, steel, chemicals and construction products have different data sources, supply chains and implementation risks.
