Turn regulatory requirements into operational readiness
Renoon helps brands prepare for evolving product and sustainability regulations through structured data, traceability workflows, and implementation support across supply chains and product systems.
Build operational readiness across products, suppliers, and regulations
Renoon helps brands structure the data and workflows required to support compliance across evolving regulations. From traceability and supplier information to product-level documentation and digital experiences, compliance becomes part of operational infrastructure rather than a disconnected reporting process.
Compliance requirements built around product and supply chain data
1)
ESPR
Digital Product Passports become mandatory for relevant product categories, with non-compliant goods blocked from the EU market: law in force since 2024, delegated acts scheduled from 2025.
2)
AGEC
Already in force in France, with product information requirements tightening each year through 2025–2027: brands without compliant environmental disclosures face fines and market exposure.
3)
Green Claims
The EU Green Claims Directive will be enforceable by 2027, making unsubstantiated sustainability language legally actionable: "eco-friendly" without traceable evidence risks claim removal and public blacklisting.
4)
CSRD
Large companies report from fiscal year 2024, mid-size from 2025: supply chain data must feed directly into sustainability disclosures, and gaps between what a company claims and what it can prove become a legal liability.
REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS
How Renoon supports evolving regulatory requirements
Renoon's Product Engine and Document Management system deliver everything needed to build and maintain a clean, structured product record.
Supply chain & system connectivity
Renoon's traceability workflows and integration layer connect suppliers, certifications, and existing internal tools into one coherent data flow.
Compliance activation
Renoon's access and verification layer publishes the passport compliantly: distinguishing what is certified from what is declared, making the data usable by regulators and consumers.