14/01/2026

Our certifications: a genuine commitment to quality and sustainability

Reinforcing excellence: the certifications that validate your packaging in 2026

At SPG, we begin 2026 by reaffirming our commitment to sustainability and quality through the leading European certifications in the packaging sector. Over recent years, we have worked consistently to ensure our solutions meet the most demanding market requirements.

Among our most relevant certifications are:

Cyclos-HTP

A benchmark recyclability certification within the EU. Several of our polypropylene (PP) and polyethylene (PE)–based structures — such as PP HB ECO (PP-based) and RSE ECO / RFA ECO (PE-based) — have achieved AA and AAA ratings, with recyclability levels of 90% or higher.

In addition, certain PA/PE technical structures, optimised for integration into polyolefin recycling streams, are also certified by Cyclos-HTP, achieving high recyclability rates. This enables our customers to comply with eco-modulation schemes, reduce associated costs and anticipate the recyclability requirements set out in the PPWR.

FSC®

Guarantees the use of paper sourced from responsibly managed forests and plays a key role in our Naturfilm and Naturtray ranges, which contain 85% paper content.

EcoVadis

Our Barcelona plants, Rotor Print, have achieved a score of 69/100 in EcoVadis, reaching the Advanced level and positioning themselves among the highest-rated companies in the sector for Environment, Ethics and Sustainable Procurement. This result represents an improvement of 12 points since 2021, confirming our continuous progress in sustainability.

CEPI

A key certification for paper-based structures, designed to ensure effective recyclability within the European paper recycling stream.

These accreditations are more than just labels: they form the technical foundation that allows our customers to operate with confidence across Europe, export without regulatory risk, and anticipate PPWR challenges such as mandatory recycled content, harmonised eco-labelling, and the minimum “Grade C” classification by 2030.