Designing for Tomorrow: What the EU’s ESPR Means for the ProAV Industry

A New Chapter in Sustainable Product Regulation
A landmark shift in European regulation is set to reshape how products are designed, built, and marketed across industries—and the professional audiovisual (ProAV) sector is no exception. The Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR), which came into effect on 18 July 2024, introduces a comprehensive framework aimed at boosting the sustainability of nearly all physical goods sold in the EU, extending far beyond the energy-focused mandates of its predecessor.
For the ProAV sector, this means adapting to new standards around durability, energy use, material recovery, and digital transparency. In a world increasingly prioritising environmental impact, the ESPR is not just compliance—it’s a strategic opportunity.
The ESPR Timeline: Key Milestones to Know
Understanding the phased rollout of the ESPR is crucial for any ProAV business operating in or exporting to the EU:
- March 2022: The European Commission formally proposed the ESPR, alongside impact assessments and policy goals to make products greener and more circular.
- July 2024: The regulation officially took effect, laying the legal groundwork for future product-specific sustainability requirements.
- Late 2024: Formation of the Ecodesign Forum, a stakeholder body designed to guide the development of product regulations.
- February 2025: The first Forum meeting brought together industry voices to influence how the ESPR gets translated into specific rules.
- April 2025: The Commission released its first Working Plan, identifying priority product categories—including electronics and ICT—for future delegated acts (regulatory measures).
- Mid-2025 and beyond: Expect the first wave of enforceable product requirements, including potentially for ProAV categories, and the debut of mandatory transparency tools like the Digital Product Passport.
What It Means for ProAV Manufacturers and Integrators
Though not named specifically yet, ProAV equipment will likely be swept into upcoming delegated acts due to its overlap with ICT and electronics sectors. Here's how the ESPR could affect ProAV product development and customer expectations:
1. Long-Term Use and Repairability
Future-ready AV gear must be designed to last—and to be fixed. Expect growing pressure to adopt modular designs, ensure spare part availability, and publish repair information to extend product life.
2. Circular Material Use
Sourcing and recyclability will move up the priority list. Manufacturers may be required to document and increase recycled material content and ensure components can be easily disassembled for recycling or reuse.
3. Energy Performance Requirements
While many ProAV devices already focus on energy efficiency, the ESPR will likely introduce expanded criteria. This could apply to standby power, networked power management, or efficiency over a product’s full operational lifespan.
4. Digital Product Passports (DPPs)
Perhaps the most revolutionary aspect, the DPP will require manufacturers to digitally disclose detailed product information—from materials and energy use to repair guides and environmental impact. This transparency will benefit integrators and customers alike, enabling smarter procurement and lifecycle management.
What ProAV Companies Should Do Now
Rather than wait for detailed product requirements, proactive firms can begin preparing now:
- Audit Product Lines: Examine your current offerings against emerging sustainability benchmarks. What’s modular? What can be disassembled? What data do you already collect?
- Invest in Data Infrastructure: Start planning for the Digital Product Passport. Gathering supply chain and material data now will ease future compliance burdens.
- Engage with Industry Forums: Participation in the Ecodesign Forum or industry groups will give you early visibility into proposed changes—and a voice in shaping them.
- Upskill Teams: Ensure your product, compliance, and engineering teams are fluent in circular design principles and ESPR terminology.
Sustainability as a Competitive Edge
While the ESPR introduces new compliance obligations, it also opens doors. Clients in corporate, education, government, and live event sectors are increasingly demanding sustainable AV solutions. Those who adopt ecodesign principles early could win business by aligning with green procurement policies or offering products with superior lifecycle value.
Final Thoughts
The ESPR marks a significant evolution in how products are regulated within the EU. For the ProAV industry, it’s a call to think beyond performance specs and price points. Products that are sustainable by design—durable, repairable, energy-efficient, and transparent—will become the new standard. By adapting early, ProAV professionals can future-proof their portfolios and lead the charge into a more sustainable AV ecosystem.
Please sign in
If you are a registered user on AVIXA Xchange, please sign in
Great article Jenny! Important updates for many of us. I love the thought of sustainability also opening doors. Thanks so much for posting this and all your work on the AVIXA Sustainability Advisory Group.
This is a fantastic overview! Clear, actionable, and timely. ESPR is definitely a wake-up call for the ProAV sector, and it's exciting to see sustainability moving from a niche concern to a strategic priority.
Thanks for Sharing !