EPR risks are growing across the country.
Is your business exposed?

EPR is expanding. Fees are becoming more material. Data expectations are increasing.

What used to be a compliance task is now a business risk.

Where EPR risk appears

Financial exposure

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) fees are based on the packaging data you report. If weights are estimated, materials are misclassified, or SKUs are missing, your company may overpay, underpay, or face future corrections.

Financial risk can come from:

  • Overpayment due to broad estimates
  • Underpayment due to incomplete data
  • Incorrect material categories
  • Missed fee optimization opportunities
  • Unexpected invoices or adjustments

Better data helps reduce unnecessary costs and supports fair producer fees.

Multi-state compliance

EPR programs are developing state by state. California, Oregon, Colorado, and other emerging programs do not all follow the same rules, timelines, definitions, or reporting systems. For legal and compliance teams, this creates a complex regulatory environment where assumptions can be risky.

Compliance risk can come from:

  • Missed registration or reporting deadlines
  • Misunderstood producer obligations
  • State-specific definitions of covered materials
  • Changing guidance from agencies and PROs
  • Lack of internal ownership

Multi-state EPR requires ongoing monitoring, clear responsibilities, and a process that can adapt as rules evolve.

Data collection & audit

EPR reports are only as reliable as the data behind them. Packaging data is often scattered across suppliers, product teams, sales platforms, finance systems, and spreadsheets. When that data is incomplete or unverifiable, reports become harder to defend.

Data and audit risk can come from:

  • Unverified packaging weights
  • Outdated packaging specifications
  • Inconsistent material classification
  • Weak documentation
  • Manual calculations
  • Limited traceability

If your report is reviewed or audited, your company needs to show how the data was collected, calculated, and validated.

Operational burden

EPR reporting requires time, coordination, and expertise. It often involves legal, compliance, sustainability, finance, product, packaging, and procurement teams. Without a clear process, EPR can quickly become a drain on internal resources.

Operational burden can come from:

  • Chasing suppliers for packaging data
  • Reconciling SKU and sales information
  • Interpreting program requirements
  • Preparing reports across jurisdictions
  • Managing deadlines and documentation
  • Responding to agency or PRO requests

EPR becomes easier to manage when the process is centralized, structured, and supported by specialists.

If you sell or distribute packaged goods, you’re likely in scope.

Evnia’s EPR Risk Shield provides full coverage. We manage your obligations from start to finish, so your team doesn’t have to.

Why this matters to your team

For Legal

EPR creates new obligations, new risk exposure, and new documentation expectations. Legal teams need confidence that the company understands its producer responsibilities and can defend its reporting approach.

For Compliance

EPR requires accurate reporting, deadline management, and jurisdiction-specific execution. Compliance teams need a process that reduces uncertainty and avoids last-minute reporting pressure.

For Sustainability

EPR connects packaging decisions with cost, recyclability, reporting, and performance. Sustainability teams need reliable data to understand how packaging choices affect obligations and fees.

Protect your business.

Evnia helps producers manage their obligations with precision, structure, and confidence.

Talk to an EPR risk expert.