EU Battery Representative Services | Battery Regulation (EU) 2023/1542 | Conregia
Battery Regulation (EU) 2023/1542

EU Battery Compliance and Authorised Representative Services

Placing batteries or battery-powered products on the EU market? Conregia helps non-EU manufacturers, importers and online sellers understand their obligations, prepare registrations and appoint a reliable EU contact for battery compliance.

Conregia is a Germany-based regulatory compliance partner for international companies that need practical EU market access support without building a full in-house compliance department.

Quick diagnostic

Are you affected by EU battery rules?

Start here if you are not sure whether you need battery registration, EPR participation or an EU Authorised Representative.

01

Do you sell batteries into the EU?

This includes batteries sold directly, through distributors, marketplaces or as replacement parts.

02

Do your products contain batteries?

Battery obligations may apply even if the battery is built into a device, tool, appliance, vehicle or industrial product.

03

Are you outside the EU?

Non-EU producers often need a formal EU contact and a clear compliance route before selling into Germany or other EU markets.

Prepare before onboarding

Documents and data usually required

  • Commercial register extract or business licence
  • Company address and legal representative details
  • Battery brands visible on the product or battery
  • Battery category and chemical composition
  • Estimated annual quantities in kilograms or tonnes
  • Existing battery registration number, if available
EU market access

One regulation. Multiple obligations.

Batteries are regulated throughout their lifecycle — from design and documentation to take-back, reporting and recycling.

Overview

What is the EU Battery Regulation?

Regulation (EU) 2023/1542 applies to batteries and waste batteries placed on the EU market. It replaces the older battery framework with stricter rules for sustainability, safety, information, labelling, producer responsibility and end-of-life management.

The rules affect companies that manufacture, import, distribute or sell batteries in the EU — including batteries sold separately and batteries incorporated into electrical equipment, vehicles or industrial products.

  • Registration before placing batteries on the market
  • Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) and take-back obligations
  • CE marking, conformity assessment and technical documentation
  • Labelling, QR code and information duties
  • Digital Battery Passport for selected battery categories from 2027
Who needs support?

Do you need an EU Representative for batteries?

If your company is not established in the EU but places batteries on the EU market, you may need an Authorised Representative and structured compliance support.

01

Foreign manufacturers

You produce batteries outside the EU and sell them directly, through distributors or via e-commerce channels into the European market.

02

Battery-powered products

Your products contain portable, industrial, LMT, EV or starter batteries and must be assessed under the correct battery category.

03

Online sellers and importers

Marketplaces, customs, distributors and authorities increasingly request proof of valid battery registration and EPR compliance.

Battery categories

Which batteries are covered?

The EU Battery Regulation covers all major battery categories. Correct classification is the starting point for registration, reporting and take-back obligations.

Portable

Portable batteries

Sealed batteries weighing 5 kg or less, not specifically designed for industrial use and not classified as EV, LMT or SLI batteries.

LMT

Light means of transport batteries

Batteries for e-bikes, e-scooters and similar light electric mobility products, subject to specific reporting and passport obligations.

SLI

Starter batteries

Starting, lighting and ignition batteries used for vehicles, machinery and auxiliary or backup purposes.

Industrial

Industrial batteries

Batteries designed for industrial uses, repurposed industrial use or batteries above 5 kg that are not EV, LMT or SLI batteries.

EV

Electric vehicle batteries

Batteries specifically designed to provide traction power for hybrid or electric vehicles under the relevant EU vehicle categories.

Embedded

Batteries in products

Battery obligations can apply even when the battery is incorporated into an electrical device, tool, appliance, vehicle or industrial product.

Conregia services

How Conregia supports your battery compliance

Conregia provides a practical compliance interface for companies that need to sell battery products in the EU without building their own internal regulatory department.

Authorised Representative appointment

We support non-EU producers with the formal appointment process and act as a reliable EU contact point for battery compliance matters where the appointment is required.

Battery registration coordination

We help identify the correct battery categories, prepare required company and product data and coordinate registration steps with the relevant systems and service partners.

EPR and take-back setup

We assist with Producer Responsibility Organisation participation, take-back structure and ongoing quantity reporting requirements.

Documentation and compliance monitoring

We help maintain compliance records and monitor upcoming changes such as labelling rules, carbon footprint declarations and Digital Battery Passport obligations.

Germany focus

Battery registration in Germany

Germany requires battery producers to register before placing batteries on the market. The competent registration system is managed through stiftung ear. Since the new battery framework, registration depends on the five battery categories and requires complete producer, brand, chemistry and quantity data.

For each relevant battery category, producers must participate in an approved Producer Responsibility Organisation. In Germany, this is known as an Organisation für Herstellerverantwortung (OfH), meaning an organisation for producer responsibility.

  • Company name, legal form, address and legal representative
  • Contact person, email and telephone number
  • VAT or tax identification number
  • Battery category, brand and chemical composition
  • Forecast quantities placed on the German market
  • Commercial register extract or business licence
Battery registration and EPR compliance support in Germany
Deadlines and obligations

Key battery compliance milestones

Battery compliance is being introduced in stages. Companies should prepare early because many obligations require product data, documentation and system registrations.

✅ In force

EU Battery Regulation enters into force

The new EU-wide framework for batteries and waste batteries starts replacing the previous battery directive structure.

✅ In force / phased

Conformity, performance and information duties

Selected requirements for CE marking, technical documentation, performance, durability and information access begin to apply depending on the battery category.

✅ Germany requirement

Germany: OfH participation required

Active battery registrations in Germany must be assigned to a Producer Responsibility Organisation for the relevant battery category.

⚠️ Upcoming

Digital Battery Passport starts

The Digital Battery Passport becomes mandatory for electric vehicle batteries, LMT batteries and industrial batteries above 2 kWh placed on the EU market.

Further sustainability obligations

Additional rules on due diligence, recycled content, carbon footprint, labelling and performance thresholds continue to phase in by category.

Enforcement and risk

What happens if you do not register?

Battery compliance failures can quickly become a commercial problem, especially for international sellers using marketplaces, distributors or customs-sensitive supply chains.

01

Marketplace blocks

Online marketplaces may request proof of battery registration, EPR participation or an authorised representative before allowing listings to remain active.

02

Sales and distribution delays

Importers, distributors and fulfilment partners may pause cooperation if the required battery registration or documentation is missing.

03

Authority action and fines

National authorities can take enforcement action for non-compliance. Consequences may include orders to stop selling, administrative proceedings and financial penalties depending on the Member State.

Additional obligations

Beyond registration: sustainability and data duties

The Battery Regulation is not only an EPR law. It also introduces product-related requirements that should be considered early in product planning.

01

Carbon footprint declarations

Certain battery categories will need carbon footprint information based on EU methodology and category-specific implementation rules.

02

Responsible sourcing due diligence

Companies may need to document responsible sourcing controls for raw materials such as lithium, cobalt, nickel and natural graphite.

03

Digital Battery Passport data

For EV, LMT and industrial batteries above 2 kWh, product data must be prepared for passport access via QR code from 2027.

Process

Your route to battery compliance

Conregia keeps the process structured, clear and manageable.

01

Product and role assessment

We review your battery products, sales model and EU market route to determine which obligations apply.

02

Data and document preparation

We collect company data, brand information, battery category, chemistry, quantities and required evidence for registration.

03

Representation and registration

We coordinate the Authorised Representative setup, registration steps and EPR participation with the relevant systems and partners.

Trust and regulatory context

Built for regulated EU market access

Battery compliance requires more than a checkbox. Conregia works with the systems, terminology and documentation expectations that manufacturers encounter when entering Germany and the EU.

Germany-basedEU contact for non-EU producers and sellers.
stiftung ear awareSupport aligned with German battery registration practice.
EPR focusedRegistration, reporting and producer responsibility coordination.
Multilingual supportUseful for international manufacturers and cross-border sellers.
Why Conregia?

A compliance partner for international sellers

Battery rules are technical, but your customer journey should not be. Conregia translates regulatory requirements into practical steps for manufacturers, importers and e-commerce companies that need to keep products legally available in the EU.

  • Clear explanation of obligations in plain business language
  • Support for non-EU companies entering Germany and the EU
  • Coordination of registration, documentation and EPR requirements
  • Long-term monitoring of upcoming battery deadlines
Compliance clarity

From uncertainty to a practical action plan

Many companies know they sell a battery product, but do not know which category, registration route or documentation duties apply. Conregia turns that uncertainty into a structured compliance checklist.

  • Identify the applicable battery category
  • Clarify whether an EU Authorised Representative is needed
  • Prepare Germany and EU registration data
  • Coordinate EPR and take-back participation
  • Monitor upcoming Digital Battery Passport obligations
FAQ

Battery Regulation questions

Does the EU Battery Regulation apply if the battery is inside another product?

Yes. Battery obligations can apply to batteries sold separately and to batteries incorporated into products. The correct assessment depends on the battery category, the product type and the role of your company in the supply chain.

What is an Authorised Representative for batteries?

An Authorised Representative is an EU-based person or company formally appointed to carry out defined compliance tasks for a producer that is not established in the relevant market. This can include registration coordination, documentation duties and communication with authorities or systems.

What is the Digital Battery Passport?

The Digital Battery Passport is an electronic record linked to certain batteries by a QR code. From 18 February 2027, it applies to electric vehicle batteries, LMT batteries and industrial batteries above 2 kWh. Conregia can help you identify whether your products fall into these categories and what data should be prepared.

Which battery categories exist under the new framework?

The main categories are portable batteries, light means of transport batteries, starter/SLI batteries, industrial batteries and electric vehicle batteries. See the battery categories section above for a practical explanation of each category.

Can Conregia help with Germany-specific battery registration?

Yes. Conregia can support classification, data preparation, Authorised Representative appointment and coordination of battery registration and EPR participation for Germany.

Start now

Need an EU Representative for batteries?

Send us your battery category, product description and target market. Conregia will review the next compliance steps and help you prepare a clear route to market.

For direct enquiries, use: “Battery Regulation EU Representative Request”.