Manufacturer under PPWR guide featuring a transparent 30% PCR PE perforated bag roll

Who Is the Manufacturer Under PPWR? A 30% PCR Perforated Bag Case Study

A packaging converter produces the film. A bag manufacturer converts it into perforated bags. A brand owner fills and seals the bags. An importer places the packaged product on the EU market. Which company is the manufacturer under PPWR?

The answer is not always the factory that physically makes the empty bag. The Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation, or PPWR, assigns responsibilities according to the packaging format, branding, design control, final conversion and route to the EU market. This guide explains those responsibilities through a practical example: Adsure Packaging’s 30% post-consumer recycled, or PCR, transparent polyethylene perforated bags on roll.

Manufacturer under PPWR guide featuring a transparent 30% PCR PE perforated bag roll

Important: This article provides general product and regulatory information, not legal advice. The responsible economic operator and applicable PPWR requirements must be confirmed for each packaging project and route to market.

What Is the Difference Between PPWD and PPWR?

The former Packaging and Packaging Waste Directive, or PPWD, required EU Member States to transpose common objectives into national law. Implementation could therefore vary between countries. Regulation (EU) 2025/40, known as the PPWR, is directly applicable across the European Union and generally applies from 12 August 2026, while many detailed obligations take effect later under phased deadlines.[1] [2] For a related operational overview, see Adsure’s guide to EU PPWR and EPR responsibilities.

Topic PPWD PPWR
Legal form Directive Regulation
National implementation Required Member-State transposition Direct EU-wide application
Recyclability grading Less harmonised EU A/B/C performance framework
Recycled plastic content Limited common requirements Mandatory future minimum percentages
Technical documentation Less standardised Formal conformity documentation
EPR Implemented mainly through national rules More harmonised framework, with national registration and reporting remaining relevant

The change matters to anyone deciding who is the manufacturer under PPWR, because the Regulation creates more explicit duties for manufacturers, importers, distributors, suppliers and producers. However, 12 August 2026 is not a universal deadline by which every future target must already be met. Companies should instead classify their packaging, identify responsible economic operators and begin building documentation before the requirements progressively become applicable.

PPWR Article 6 establishes recyclability performance grades A, B and C. Detailed design-for-recycling criteria are still to be established through delegated acts, which the Commission is required to adopt by 1 January 2028. The design-for-recycling condition applies from 1 January 2030 or 24 months after those delegated acts enter into force, whichever is later.[1] A supplier should therefore not promise a final official A, B or C grade for a current bag before the applicable assessment rules are available.

Who Is the Manufacturer Under PPWR?

Under the Regulation, “manufacturer” is a legal compliance role, not merely a description of the company operating a film-extrusion or bag-making machine. The European Commission’s 2026 PPWR guidance explains how the role should be identified in different supply chains and indicates that, in principle, there should be one manufacturer under PPWR for a packaging item.[3]

For sales packaging and grouped packaging that are completed during packing, the business performing the final cutting, filling and sealing, and placing the packed product on the market, may be the manufacturer. Branding and design control can also change the analysis. A company that has packaging made and marketed under its own name or trademark may assume the manufacturer’s obligations even when another factory performs the physical conversion.[1] [3]

The Manufacturer Under PPWR Is Not Always the Physical Bag Factory

Consider a roll of film or partially converted bags. If a customer completes the final conversion, fills the bags, seals them and places the packaged goods on the EU market under its own brand, that customer or brand owner may be the manufacturer under PPWR. By contrast, when a supplier places a completed, unbranded packaging format on the market under its own control, the supplier may be the manufacturer. The facts must be reviewed project by project.

Typical supply-chain situation Party that may be the manufacturer under PPWR Key facts to verify
Customer completes cutting, filling and sealing of sales packaging Customer, packer or brand owner Final conversion, branding and market placement
Adsure supplies completed, unbranded transport packaging based mainly on its own design Adsure may hold the role Packaging type, design control and contractual scope
Bags carry the customer’s name or trademark and follow customer-defined specifications Customer or brand owner may hold the role Trademark, specification ownership and intended use
Importer or distributor sells packaging under its own brand or modifies it in a way that affects conformity Importer or distributor may assume manufacturer duties Rebranding, modifications and placing on the market
Supplier and user jointly develop unbranded packaging Depends on the facts Who orders and determines the essential design specifications

When Can a Packaging Converter Be the Manufacturer?

Adsure may be the manufacturer under PPWR when it supplies packaging in its final form, controls the essential design, places it on the market under its own name and the packaging is not later completed or branded in a way that changes the responsibility analysis. This may be more relevant to certain finished transport, service or unbranded packaging formats.

The precise conclusion cannot be made solely from a purchase order description such as “plastic bag.” The parties should record the packaging category, design decisions, brand ownership, final conversion steps, intended packed product, destination market and contractual allocation of information duties.

When Is the Customer or Brand Owner the Manufacturer?

A customer is more likely to be the manufacturer under PPWR when it determines the bag dimensions, thickness, structure, printing and intended use; places its name or trademark on the packaging or packaged product; performs the final filling and sealing; and supplies the packaged goods in the EU under its own brand. The Commission guidance should be consulted alongside the Regulation and the facts of the transaction.[1] [3]

Manufacturer Versus Producer

Manufacturer primarily addresses packaging conformity: sustainability requirements, conformity assessment, technical documentation, required declarations and relevant labelling. Producer primarily addresses national extended producer responsibility obligations, including registration, reporting and waste-management contributions. The two roles may be held by different entities.[1] [3]

Knowing the manufacturer under PPWR does not automatically identify the EPR producer in every Member State. Businesses must assess both roles, especially where a non-EU supplier, EU importer, brand owner, fulfilment operator and online seller are involved.

A Practical Example: Adsure’s 30% PCR Transparent PE Bag

Adsure’s product-development example is a transparent PE perforated bag on roll containing 30% post-consumer recycled plastic. It can be developed as a manually dispensed perforated bag or, where the opening geometry, perforation, winding and equipment parameters are defined, as a pre-opened bag for automated packaging. Adsure’s existing product range includes custom PE pre-opened and perforated bags on rolls, recycled-material options and custom dimensions, perforations and printing.[4] [5]

Product specification Project description
Product Transparent PE perforated bags on roll
Recycled content 30% post-consumer recycled plastic
Main material PE-based structure
Format Bags separated by perforation
Appearance Transparent
Sizes Customisable after application review
Printing Plain or custom printed
Application Subject to packed product, equipment and packaging classification
Manufacturing role Determined by branding, design control, final conversion and intended use
Transparent 30% PCR PE bags on a roll with a tear perforation and winding direction
Product-detail illustration of a transparent 30% PCR PE perforated bag web.

The 30% PCR formulation reduces dependence on virgin resin by replacing part of the polymer input with post-consumer recycled material. That percentage must be supported by appropriate supplier, batch, mass-balance or traceability evidence under the agreed project scope. It should not be treated as a standalone legal conclusion.

The roll format can support continuous dispensing. For automatic packing, buyers should specify the open side, perforation position, seal geometry, web width, roll core, maximum roll diameter, winding direction, registration requirements and machine model. Compatibility should be validated against the customer’s equipment and operating conditions rather than described as universal.

Adsure can also review dimensions, thickness, PCR level, clarity, print coverage, venting, sealing performance and sample-testing requirements. A buyer selecting the manufacturer under PPWR should ensure that these design inputs and responsibilities are documented before mass production. This written decision also helps the manufacturer under PPWR maintain consistent evidence across purchasing, testing and conformity review.

Does 30% PCR Make the Bag PPWR Compliant?

No. A single PCR percentage does not make packaging automatically PPWR compliant. A conformity assessment may also need to address packaging classification, recyclability, minimisation, substances of concern, labelling, technical documentation, production controls, importer duties and the EU Declaration of Conformity.[1]

For plastic packaging other than the contact-sensitive categories and single-use beverage bottles listed in Article 7(1), the current PPWR text sets a 35% minimum recycled-content target by 1 January 2030 or three years after the relevant implementing act enters into force, whichever is later. The corresponding 2040 value is 65%.[1] If the transparent PE bag falls in this general non-contact-sensitive category, a 30% PCR formulation is below the future 35% threshold.

The responsible manufacturer under PPWR should therefore position the 30% PCR bag as a current transition option that can reduce virgin-plastic use, support material testing and create a documentation baseline. It should not be marketed as a “fully PPWR-compliant 30% PCR bag.” A higher-PCR version may be developed and validated, but its suitability will depend on transparency, sealing, strength, equipment performance, traceability and the final calculation rules.

Contact-sensitive packaging can be subject to different percentages and possible derogations. The classification of food, medical, pharmaceutical or other sensitive applications must therefore be confirmed before selecting a target.[1]

How Can the Manufacturer Under PPWR Prepare?

The manufacturer under PPWR should build a project-specific evidence file rather than relying on a generic supplier certificate. The following sequence helps procurement, compliance and engineering teams work from the same assumptions.

Step Buyer action Output to retain
1. Classify the packaging Determine whether it is sales, grouped, transport, service or contact-sensitive packaging Written classification and intended-use statement
2. Identify responsible operators Record who controls design, owns the brand, performs final conversion and first places the packaging on the EU market Responsibility matrix
3. Define the PCR target Match the category and use to the applicable Article 7 percentage and date Target specification and calculation basis
4. Review design for recycling Assess PE structure, inks, labels, adhesives, additives and separability Design review and test plan
5. Minimise packaging Balance protective performance with weight, volume and empty space Size and thickness rationale
6. Build technical documentation Compile drawings, material data, tests, calculations, risk assessment and production controls Controlled technical file
7. Coordinate suppliers and importers Agree what evidence each party provides and how updates are managed Supplier document schedule

PPWR Annex VII describes technical-documentation content such as a general description, conceptual design and manufacturing drawings, explanations needed to understand them, applicable standards or specifications, qualitative analyses, test reports and other evidence.[1] The exact file should reflect the packaging and the conformity requirements that apply to it.

Even when Adsure is not the legal manufacturer under PPWR for the final packaging, it can support the customer as a packaging supplier. Article 15 requires suppliers to provide the manufacturer with the information and documentation necessary to demonstrate conformity, subject to the applicable scope and agreement.[1]

Seven-step PPWR packaging preparation workflow for classification, PCR targets and documentation
A seven-step workflow for project-specific PPWR packaging preparation.

What Documentation Can Adsure Provide?

Documentation can be prepared according to the final packaging specification, intended use, destination market and agreed compliance scope. Depending on the project, Adsure can provide or coordinate supplier-side information such as a product specification, material-composition declaration, PCR raw-material records, batch and production traceability data, dimensions and thickness records, sealing or performance test results, and third-party laboratory reports.

For customers preparing their technical files, Adsure can also provide manufacturing drawings, process information and data needed to support a packaging-minimisation rationale. The customer and Adsure should agree in advance which documents apply to the order and whether additional testing is required.

Adsure Packaging also holds relevant SGS-issued compliance certification, providing independent third-party support for its material-compliance and quality-control capabilities.[6] For the applicable product scope, Adsure can provide available material declarations, traceability documents and SGS testing or certification records. An SGS report or certificate may support technical documentation, but it does not transfer or replace the legal responsibility of the manufacturer under PPWR. Unless a certificate explicitly covers PPWR conformity for the exact product and scope, the safer descriptions are “SGS-issued compliance certification,” “SGS testing and documentation,” or “supported by SGS testing or certification.”

Why Work With Adsure Packaging?

Founded in 1985, Adsure Packaging has more than 40 years of packaging manufacturing experience and supplies custom packaging to customers in more than 60 countries.[7] The company develops customised perforated bags and pre-opened bags on roll and can adjust the structure for the packed product, material requirements, dispensing method and equipment parameters.[4] [5]

Adsure is not only a bag converter. Its team can work with buyers to define the bag structure, PCR level, machine requirements, performance criteria and supplier-documentation scope before mass production. Sample development and performance validation help buyers identify trade-offs between recycled content, clarity, sealing, strength and line efficiency.

This approach is especially useful when the customer will become the manufacturer under PPWR for the final branded packaging. Adsure can contribute supplier-side data and test evidence while the responsible business completes its own classification, conformity assessment and technical file.

Conclusion: Confirm the Manufacturer Under PPWR Before Making Claims

PPWR compliance begins by identifying the packaging type and the responsible manufacturer under PPWR. A 30% PCR transparent PE perforated bag can reduce virgin-plastic use and support a customer’s transition plan, but the final assessment depends on intended use, design, branding, documentation, market route and the applicable recycled-content target.

For general non-contact-sensitive plastic packaging, the present 30% PCR example should be treated as a transition option, not as proof that the future 35% target or every other PPWR obligation has been met. The next step is to combine an appropriate PCR formulation with equipment validation, material traceability, design-for-recycling review and a controlled technical-documentation plan.

Planning a PCR bag project for the European market? Send Adsure your bag dimensions, thickness, packed product, annual volume, printing requirements, packaging equipment and intended EU market. Our team can review manufacturability, PCR options and the supplier documentation required for your project.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between PPWD and PPWR?

PPWD was a directive that Member States implemented through national law. PPWR is Regulation (EU) 2025/40 and is directly applicable across the EU. It introduces a more harmonised framework for packaging sustainability, recyclability, recycled content, labelling, minimisation, documentation and EPR, although many detailed obligations apply in stages and still depend on delegated or implementing acts.[1] [2]

Who is the manufacturer under PPWR?

The manufacturer under PPWR is the economic operator legally responsible for packaging conformity. It is not automatically the factory that physically produces an empty bag. Branding, essential design control, final cutting or conversion, filling and sealing, and the party placing the packaging or packaged product on the EU market can all affect the determination.[1] [3]

Is the bag manufacturer always the PPWR manufacturer?

No. A bag factory can be a supplier while the customer or brand owner is the PPWR manufacturer for the final packaging. This is more likely when the customer controls the specifications, uses its own name or trademark, performs final filling and sealing, and places the packaged goods on the EU market. Each supply chain should be documented separately.[3]

Does 30% PCR make plastic packaging PPWR compliant?

No. PCR content is only one requirement. Compliance can also involve classification, recyclability, minimisation, substances, labelling, technical documentation, conformity assessment and importer duties. For ordinary non-contact-sensitive plastic packaging, the Regulation currently sets a future 35% minimum, so a 30% PCR bag should be presented as a transition option rather than a final compliance claim.[1]

What recycled content will plastic packaging need by 2030?

Article 7 currently sets 2030 minimums of 30% for contact-sensitive PET packaging, 10% for contact-sensitive non-PET packaging, 30% for single-use plastic beverage bottles and 35% for other plastic packaging. The deadline is 1 January 2030 or three years after the relevant implementing act enters into force, whichever is later. Exceptions and adjustments may apply.[1]

Can SGS issue a PPWR compliance certificate?

A laboratory or certification body can provide testing, audits or certification within a defined scope, but a report does not replace the manufacturer’s legal responsibility under PPWR. Buyers should verify the certificate title, tested product, standards, scope and validity. Avoid “SGS-certified PPWR compliant” unless the exact certificate explicitly supports that claim for the applicable packaging.[1] [6]

Reviewed by: Adsure Packaging Technical Team

Trademark Disclaimer: Autobag®, SidePouch®, and FAS SPRint Revolution™ are trademarks of Automated Packaging Systems, Inc. (a Sealed Air company). Adsure Packaging is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or authorized by Sealed Air Corporation or Automated Packaging Systems. All compatible products are independently manufactured by Adsure Packaging.

References

  1. Regulation (EU) 2025/40 on packaging and packaging waste.
  2. European Commission: Packaging waste.
  3. Commission Notice: Guidance document for Regulation (EU) 2025/40.
  4. Adsure custom PE perforated pre-opened bags on roll.
  5. Adsure pre-opened auto bags manufacturer.
  6. Adsure certificates and patents.
  7. Adsure Packaging company profile and manufacturing experience.

Auto Pre-Opened Bags on Rolls Blog Cover

Maximizing Efficiency with Auto Pre-Opened Bags on Rolls: A Complete Guide for Automated Packaging

TL;DR: Auto pre-opened bags on rolls are pre-separated, machine-ready bags designed for automated bagging systems. They reduce labour by up to 50%, minimise jams, and are compatible with leading Autobag®-style machines across e-commerce, food, and industrial sectors.

Auto pre-opened bags on rolls are transforming modern manufacturing lines worldwide. In the fast-paced world of production, efficiency isn’t just an advantage — it’s a necessity. As businesses scale, manual bagging often becomes a bottleneck, leading to increased labor costs and slower fulfillment times. This is where auto pre-opened bags come into play. Designed specifically for high-speed, automated packaging systems, these bags are the secret to streamlining your production line, cutting packaging costs by up to 50%, and ensuring consistent, professional results.

What Are Auto Pre-Opened Bags on a Roll?

Auto pre-opened bags on a roll are continuous rolls of plastic bags where each bag is pre-opened on one side and separated by a precise perforation line. This unique design allows for rapid, easy loading on automated bagging machines. Unlike traditional loose bags, these rolls feed seamlessly into equipment: the machine blows air to open the bag, waits for the product to be inserted, then heat-seals it — all in as little as 1–2 seconds per bag, enabling throughputs of 30–60 bags per minute.

According to industry benchmarks published by the Flexible Packaging Association (FPA), automation in flexible packaging can reduce manual labor requirements by up to 50% while maintaining high precision in sealing and labeling — a key reason manufacturers are switching from manual fill-and-seal to pre-opened roll bagging.

Seamless Compatibility with Major Autobag®ger Machines

Adsure auto pre-opened bags compatible with Autobag®, Sharp Packaging and Pregis automatic bagging machines

One of the most common questions we receive is: “Are your auto bags compatible with my existing equipment?” The answer is a resounding yes. Adsure’s Auto Pre-Opened Bags are engineered to be fully compatible with most major automated bagging machines on the market, including:

  • Autobag® systems (e.g., AB 180, AB 255, PaceSetter PS 125)
  • Sharp Packaging machines (e.g., Max and MaxPro series)
  • Pregis automated systems
  • APS AutoBagger and other compatible OEM equipment

This universal compatibility means you can switch to Adsure’s high-quality auto pre-opened bags without investing in new machinery or undergoing complex re-configurations. Our bags feature a standard 3-inch paper core diameter, the industry benchmark for seamless integration.

Auto Pre-Opened Bag Features That Drive Performance

To truly optimize your packaging line, it’s important to understand the technical parameters that make auto pre-opened bags “high-performance”. At Adsure, our auto pre-opened bags are engineered around four critical performance factors:

1. Material Versatility

Depending on your product, you can choose from LDPE, HDPE, or various co-extruded films in 1.5 mil, 2 mil, 3 mil, or 4 mil thicknesses. For electronics, our ESD and antistatic pre-opened bags protect sensitive components; for metal parts, our VCI films prevent corrosion for up to 24 months.

2. Perforation Lines

Each bag is separated by a precise perforation line, ensuring clean and consistent tearing during the automated cycle — a small detail that prevents costly downtime on high-speed lines. Learn more in our guide to perforation and tear-notch optimization.

3. Vent Holes & Suffocation Warnings

To prevent “ballooning” and ensure a snug fit, we can add custom vent holes that allow air to escape after sealing. For retail and apparel, we also print suffocation warnings compliant with U.S., EU, and AU regulations.

4. Custom Printing

We offer high-quality graphics with up to 10 colors, allowing you to print logos, barcodes, UV eye-marks, and regulatory information directly on the bag — turning every package into a branded touchpoint.

“The transition from manual bagging to automated pre-opened rolls was the single biggest factor in doubling our daily output.” — Testimonial from a leading electronics distributor

Watch Our Autobag®ger Bags in Action

See how Adsure’s pre-opened bags perform on real high-speed automatic bagging machines:

Why Choose Adsure Auto Pre-Opened Bags for Your Packaging Line?

Infographic summarizing 50% labor reduction, 3-inch core, up to 60 bags per minute throughput, and FDA/USDA/GRS compliance of Adsure pre-opened bags

As a trusted manufacturer with over 20 years of flexible packaging experience, Adsure Packaging doesn’t just provide bags — we provide turnkey automated packaging solutions. Our products are made from food-grade, virgin resins and comply with FDA 21 CFR and USDA regulations, making them safe for applications from medical devices to food contact.

For sustainability-focused businesses, we also offer options certified to the Global Recycled Standard (GRS 4.0), along with BPI-, TÜV Austria-, and DIN CERTCO-certified compostable and biodegradable auto bags. Explore our full certifications and patents to verify compliance for your target market.

Automated Bagging at a Glance

Feature Specification Benefit
Core Size Standard 3-inch Fits 95%+ of industrial autobaggers
Material LDPE / HDPE / VCI / ESD / Kraft / Compostable Tailored protection for any product
Thickness 1.5–4 mil From light retail items to heavy industrial parts
Printing Up to 10 colors Enhanced branding and traceability
Throughput 30–60 bags/min Up to 50% labor cost reduction
Compliance FDA / USDA / GRS / BPI / TÜV Global market readiness

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

What is the best material for my specific product application?

The choice of material depends on your product’s needs. LDPE offers excellent clarity and flexibility for apparel and retail; HDPE provides superior strength for heavier parts; ESD and VCI films are ideal for electronics and metal components. Most applications use 2–3 mil thickness.

Are Adsure auto bags compatible with Autobag® and Sharp Packaging machines?

Yes. Our pre-opened bags on rolls are manufactured to the standard 3-inch core specification and are fully compatible with Autobag® (AB 180, AB 255, PaceSetter series), Sharp Packaging (Max/MaxPro), Pregis, and most other OEM autobaggers — no machine modifications required.

How do I get a quote for custom-sized or printed auto bags?

Share your required dimensions, material, mil thickness, print artwork, and target quantity with our sales team. We typically respond with a no-obligation custom quote within 24 business hours and can produce samples in 7–10 days.

Are your pre-opened bags on a roll FDA-approved for food contact?

Yes. Adsure’s auto bags are manufactured using food-grade, virgin resins compliant with FDA 21 CFR 177.1520 and USDA regulations, ensuring products remain safe and uncontaminated throughout packaging and distribution.

Do you offer sustainable or compostable autobagger bags?

Absolutely. We offer GRS 4.0-certified recycled, BPI- and TÜV Austria-certified compostable, and biodegradable pre-opened bag options — all engineered to run on the same automated equipment as conventional LDPE bags.

Ready to Upgrade Your Packaging Efficiency?

Don’t let manual processes hold your business back. Adsure’s auto pre-opened bags deliver the reliability, compatibility, and measurable performance gains you need to stay competitive.

Get a Free Quote Today »

Prefer to talk to a specialist first? Schedule a consultation with our packaging engineers — we’ll help you select the right material, mil thickness, and machine configuration for your line.


Trademark Disclaimer: Autobag®, SidePouch®, and FAS SPRint Revolution™ are trademarks of Automated Packaging Systems, Inc. (a Sealed Air company). Adsure Packaging is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or authorized by Sealed Air Corporation or Automated Packaging Systems. All compatible products are independently manufactured by Adsure Packaging.


Reviewed by: Adsure Packaging Technical Team — 20+ years of flexible packaging engineering, ISO 9001-certified manufacturing.


Automatic and Smart Packaging Bags

automatic packaging

Have you imagine new way for automatic packaging?

Packaging appears everywhere in our life. It has been an indispensable way for online shopping, retailers and so on.For online shopping, many online stores will use carton sealing tapes, packaging boxes, bubble mailers and poly mailers for their packaging.

Poly mailers do play an important role for shipping .Ecommerce and Courier Company normally put the shipping items into the poly mailer bags and seals it. And then put the waybill into the clear outer pouch or sticker the shipping label on to the mailing bags with courier information.

Will you think it is a good way for your packaging? Do you need to make your packaging more smart and quickly?

Automatic packaging-Auto Bag

Auto Bags, are also called Pre-opened bags, which is used on automatic baggers. Each bag is pre-opened on one side and has a slit in front and a perforated back between bags and slit-top openings for automatic machine or fast hand product loading.They are ideal for apparel,small parts,seed packaging.

auto bag for small parts

People just need to put the product inside and meanwhile the thermal printing on the bag directly and the auto packaging machine will heat seal the bag very quickly.

auto-packaging

This kind of packaging method will help many online stores and people who need auto packaging quickly.

And it will save their time and cost cause there is no self-adhesive tape and shipping label or waybill.

The auto bag can be customized on rolls or fan folded in a box. Fanfold auto bag will help you save the volume and then help you save the shipping cost. But not all automatic packaging machines are suitable for these two packaging style.

custom auto bagsFanfold Auto Bag

Some machine can match this two packaging while others just can use on rolls or fanfold in a box. It also depends on your automatic packaging machine.

If your company have a lot of goods for packaging and you want to save your time for packaging. Auto bag may be a good choice for you.