group online header
News

Farrelly Mitchell featured in Graphic Communications Group

Exporters urged to prepare for EU packaging standards

The following article was originally published by Graphic Online on Fri 31 Oct 2025

Ghanaian agri-food exporters are to start preparing for major changes in their products packaging materials designed for the European Union (EU) market.

This follows the introduction of a new requirement by the EU Commission on packaging waste regulations (PPWR) and updated rules on bisphenol A (BPA).

The requirement, which takes effect from July 2026, is in response to growing environmental concerns and mounting scientific evidence of BPA-related safety risks.

These regulations will progressively impose stricter requirements on all agri-food exports meant for the EU market to ensure chemical safety of food-contact packaging materials, as well as their recyclability, reusability, traceability and compostability.

The study

However, a new study has found very low awareness and compliance of the new PPWR and BPA requirements among Ghanaian exporters and state actors.

The study established that the Ghana Standard Authority (GSA), though familiar with aspects of the PPWR, is yet to develop regulatory frameworks or laboratory capacity for BPA testing and compliance.

The Farrelly Mitchell Business Consultants Limited was commissioned by COLEAD (formerly COLEACP) to assess the impact of the new EU regulations using Ghana as a case study.
National roadmap

Speaking at a workshop on the new regulation in Accra yesterday, a Senior Consultant at Farrelly Mitchell Business Consultants Limited, Dr Hanson Arthur, called for the development of a national roadmap to align Ghana’s packaging regulations with EU standards.

He said the country must scale up testing and recyclability assessment capacities to mitigate trade disruption and support exporters’ transition.

Dr Arthur explained that one of the key recommendations was to accelerate the implementation of Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) schemes and roll out waste collection infrastructure pilots to improve recycling and sustainable waste management across the packaging value chain.

He said the initiative would also mobilise technical and financial assistance from development partners to support small and medium enterprises in meeting the new packaging compliance standards.

Dr Arthur said efforts would be made to develop sector-wide traceability systems, drawing valuable lessons from the well-established traceability framework used in Ghana’s cocoa industry.

He called for increased investment in packaging innovation, encouraging manufacturers to benchmark their practices against global best standards to enhance competitiveness and sustainability.

Stricter requirements

The West African Regional Director of Farrelly Mitchell Business Consultants Limited, Stephen Awuah, explained that the EU’s recent adoption of regulation (EU) 2025/40 on packaging and packaging waste and Regulation 2024/3190 on the use of bisphenol A in food contact materials would significantly influence global trade standards.

“In view of these policy changes, COLEAD engaged Farrelly Mitchell to carry out an impact assessment to determine how the new EU framework could affect Ghana’s agri-food export industry,” he said.

Mr Awuah said the workshop was designed to validate the findings of the impact study to ensure they accurately reflected the practical realities and challenges faced by actors within Ghana’s agri-food export sector.

 

Author

Morgan

More insights

Blog
5 min read
Explore how EU, US, and UK food safety assurance standards create trade barriers, drive diplomatic negotiations, and transform global agri-food . . .
News
5 min read
  • Crops
Our North American Regional Director discusses how the largest low-carbon organic wheat initiative in the United States is reducing synthetic . . .
Blog
5 min read
Discover how South Africa's carbon offset market is enabling businesses to meet climate goals, reduce carbon tax liabilities, and create . . .
Blog
10 min read
Environmental and social impact assessments help agribusinesses evaluate project impacts, ensure sustainability, comply with regulations, and support resilient communities. . . .

Subscribe to our newsletter

Receive the latest updates from the agribusiness world, including fresh insights and more, directly in your inbox.

FM Agribusiness newsletter

Get in touch

Our team are ready to help you on the pathway to achieving your goals in food or agribusiness.

This form collects your name, email address and contact number so that Farrelly Mitchell can communicate with you and provide assistance. Please check our privacy policy to see how we protect and manage your submitted data.

Speak with our food & agribusiness experts

Want to call us directly? We’d love to hear from you.
Here’s how you can reach us.
Office Location
Utopia Office, 14 Senchi Street, Airport Residential Area, Accra, Ghana