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posted 7 hours ago
Last updated: 24 June 2026
The plastic waste shipment requirements Germany must now satisfy changed fundamentally on 21 May 2026, when the revised EU Waste Shipment Regulation (Reg. 2024/1157) replaced the long‑standing Regulation 1013/2006 and, with it, the Digital Waste Shipment System (DIWASS) went live as the mandatory channel for prior informed consent (PIC) notifications. A second deadline looms on 21 November 2026, when a general ban on exports of plastic waste, including waste classified under Basel code B3011 and EU code EU3011, to non‑OECD countries takes effect. Together, these two milestones require every German exporter, carrier, recycler and municipal waste manager involved in cross‑border plastic waste movements to overhaul documentation, digital filing processes and procurement contracts within a compressed timeline.
Before examining the details, compliance managers should answer two threshold questions. The decision matrix below frames the immediate obligations that apply to any organisation shipping plastic waste from Germany in 2026.
| Compliance question | Answer | Effective date |
|---|---|---|
| Must we submit prior notification and consent (PIC) digitally? | Yes, all PIC notifications must be submitted through DIWASS. Paper‑based notifications are no longer accepted. | 21 May 2026 |
| Can we still export plastic waste to non‑OECD countries? | No, a general ban applies to exports of most plastic waste (B3011 / EU3011 and related codes) to non‑OECD destinations, unless a narrow exception is demonstrated. | 21 November 2026 |
These two rules interact. An exporter whose shipments currently travel to non‑OECD recycling facilities must simultaneously master the DIWASS filing process and find OECD‑based alternative destinations, or cease exporting altogether, within months. The immediate actions are clear:
Regulation (EU) 2024/1157, commonly referred to as the new Waste Shipment Regulation or WSR, was adopted to modernise the EU’s framework for cross‑border waste movements. The previous regime under Waste Shipment Regulation 1013/2006 had governed transfrontier waste shipments for nearly two decades, but its paper‑based notification system, inconsistent enforcement across Member States and limited controls on plastic waste exports to developing countries drew sustained criticism from environmental authorities, the European Parliament and civil society organisations such as Break Free From Plastic.
The new WSR introduces three structural reforms that directly affect plastic waste shipment requirements Germany‑wide:
In Germany, the competent authority structure for waste shipments is divided between the federal level and the sixteen Länder. The Umweltbundesamt (UBA), the German Federal Environment Agency, acts as the national focal point and provides technical guidance on transfrontier shipment requirements. Operational enforcement, however, rests primarily with the competent authorities of each Land (state). Depending on the Land, this may be a state environment ministry, a regional authority (Bezirksregierung) or a specialised waste agency.
The Bundesministerium für Umwelt (BMU) sets federal policy and coordinates Germany’s position in EU implementation discussions. Practical interpretation of the WSR’s provisions, including how DIWASS filings are processed and how Annex VII documentation is inspected, therefore varies slightly between Länder, making it critical to confirm local requirements with the relevant state authority.
| Obligation | Old law (Reg. 1013/2006) | New law (Reg. 2024/1157) |
|---|---|---|
| Notification format | Paper‑based notification and movement documents | Mandatory digital filing via DIWASS |
| Green List (Annex VII) documentation | Annex VII information form; contract required but enforcement inconsistent | Updated Annex VII with stricter contract clauses, carrier declarations and record‑keeping |
| Plastic waste exports to non‑OECD | Permitted subject to PIC | General ban effective 21 November 2026 (B3011 / EU3011) |
| Enforcement powers | National rules; variable inspections | Strengthened inspection obligations; harmonised penalties framework |
On 21 May 2026, the European Commission confirmed that the new WSR provisions and the DIWASS platform became operational across all EU Member States. From that date, any shipment of waste that requires prior notification and consent under the WSR must be notified exclusively through DIWASS. For German exporters, this means that every PIC notification, whether for hazardous waste, mixed waste or plastic waste destined for disposal, must be initiated, processed and tracked digitally. The former paper notification and movement documents are no longer valid.
The practical effect for organisations that have not yet registered is immediate: without DIWASS access, it is not possible to submit a lawful notification, and any shipment dispatched without valid PIC authorisation constitutes an illegal shipment under the WSR.
Six months after the DIWASS launch, the WSR’s plastic waste export ban for non‑OECD destinations takes effect. The ban covers plastic waste classified under Basel Convention code B3011 and EU code EU3011, as well as related plastic waste entries. Early indications suggest that the scope of the ban will be interpreted broadly by German competent authorities, consistent with guidance published by regional bodies such as the Sachsen‑Anhalt environment ministry.
For exporters currently sending plastic waste to countries in Southeast Asia, Africa or South America that are not OECD members, the compliance decision is binary:
Industry observers expect that the six‑month window between DIWASS launch and the ban will create significant pressure on OECD‑based recycling capacity, potentially driving up treatment costs and contract renegotiations across the sector.
DIWASS operates as a centralised EU platform, but registration is channelled through national competent authorities. German organisations must register by contacting their relevant Land authority or the UBA, depending on the type of waste and the direction of shipment. The system supports multiple user roles, and compliance teams should assign at least two authorised users, a primary filer and a backup, to avoid bottlenecks during peak filing periods.
Required registration details typically include the company’s legal name, registration number, VAT identification, the name of the designated contact person and the types of waste codes the organisation handles. Once registered, users receive login credentials that grant access to the notification submission, tracking and document upload modules.
The DIWASS interface requires structured data input. Organisations should prepare a field mapping exercise before their first submission, aligning internal waste tracking records with DIWASS data requirements. The table below illustrates the key fields, example values and supporting documentation.
| DIWASS field | Example value | Documents to attach |
|---|---|---|
| Notifier (exporter / holder) | ABC Recycling GmbH, DE‑12345 | Company registration certificate |
| Waste description & Basel/EU code | Plastic waste, B3011 / EU3011 | Laboratory analysis or sorting report |
| Quantity (tonnes) | 120 t per shipment | Weighbridge ticket or estimate with methodology |
| Country of dispatch / transit / destination | DE → NL → BE (recovery facility) | Route plan; transit country consent (if required) |
| Recovery facility & R‑code | XYZ Recovery NV, R3 (mechanical recycling) | Facility permit; proof of authorisation |
| Carrier details | Haulage Ltd., licence no. XXXX | Carrier licence; insurance certificate |
| Financial guarantee / insurance | Bank guarantee ref. BG‑2026‑0001 | Original guarantee document (uploaded PDF) |
| Contract between notifier and consignee | Signed contract dated 01.04.2026 | Executed contract (uploaded PDF) |
Once the notification is submitted in DIWASS, the system routes it to the competent authority of dispatch (in Germany, the relevant Land authority), the competent authority of destination and, where applicable, the competent authority of transit. Each authority has a defined period, generally 30 days from acknowledgment, to raise objections or grant consent. If no objection is raised within the statutory period, consent may be deemed to have been given, though German authorities typically issue explicit written consent.
Compliance teams should build a notification lead time of at least 45 to 60 days before the intended shipment date. This accounts for the acknowledgment period, the 30‑day consent window and potential requests for additional information. For recurring shipments, general notifications covering multiple shipments over a defined period can reduce the administrative burden.
Early experience with DIWASS filings across Member States points to several recurring issues that trigger rejection or delay:
Annex VII of the WSR governs shipments of waste that appear on the so‑called “Green List”, non‑hazardous wastes destined for recovery in another country. Under Regulation 2024/1157, certain plastic wastes that were formerly treated as Green List shipments now fall within the PIC procedure. However, for plastic waste that remains eligible for the Green List pathway (for example, clean, sorted, single‑polymer plastics shipped between OECD countries for recovery), the Annex VII documentation requirements have been substantially strengthened.
The Annex VII information document must accompany every Green List shipment and serve as the primary evidence that the shipment is lawful. Unlike PIC shipments, Annex VII movements do not require prior authority consent, but the documentation must be complete, accurate and available for inspection at any point during transit.
Under the revised WSR, the contract between the person who arranges the shipment and the consignee must include specific minimum provisions. The likely practical effect will be that existing boilerplate contracts are no longer sufficient. At a minimum, the contract should address:
Each carrier involved in an Annex VII shipment must sign a declaration confirming that the shipment matches the information in the Annex VII document and that the carrier holds the necessary authorisations. The declaration should include the carrier’s name, licence number, vehicle registration and the date and point of handover.
| Annex VII required document | Responsible party | Minimum retention period |
|---|---|---|
| Completed Annex VII information form | Person arranging the shipment (exporter / holder) | 5 years |
| Contract with consignee (including take‑back and recovery clauses) | Exporter / holder and consignee | 5 years |
| Carrier declaration(s) | Each carrier in the transport chain | 5 years |
| Waste characterisation evidence (lab analysis or sorting certificate) | Exporter / holder | 5 years |
| Consignee confirmation of receipt and recovery | Consignee / recovery facility | 5 years |
| Entity type | Pre‑shipment obligation | Post‑shipment obligation |
|---|---|---|
| Exporter / holder | Waste classification; Annex VII pack; DIWASS submission (PIC) | Keep confirmation of consent; consignee acknowledgment; retain records 5 years |
| Carrier / freight forwarder | Ensure contract includes Annex VII clause; verify shipment matches DIWASS data | Provide transport confirmations; co‑operate in inspections |
| Consignee / recycler | Provide acceptance and treatment details; confirm legal status | Send recovery/disposal confirmation to authorities if required |
German enforcement of waste shipment rules operates at both federal and Länder level. The Umweltbundesamt coordinates national enforcement strategy, while Länder authorities, often through environmental inspectorates or customs collaboration, carry out physical inspections at borders, ports and waste handling facilities. Under the strengthened WSR framework, illegal shipments face a range of consequences:
NGO monitoring, including campaigns by organisations such as those tracking green claims and environmental compliance, has increased public scrutiny of waste exports, raising reputational risk alongside legal exposure.
The revised plastic waste shipment requirements Germany imposes should be reflected in procurement and contracting documents. Industry observers expect that public and private procurement frameworks will need to incorporate provisions such as:
Municipal waste managers whose existing contracts pre‑date the WSR revision should assess whether the scope of those contracts remains lawful. Where a contract permits export to non‑OECD destinations, the municipality faces direct legal risk after 21 November 2026. Re‑tendering or contract amendment should begin immediately. Tender evaluation criteria should include the bidder’s DIWASS registration status, history of compliant shipments and domestic or intra‑EU recovery capacity.
The 2026 overhaul of plastic waste shipment requirements Germany faces represents the most significant change to cross‑border waste controls in nearly two decades. With DIWASS and PIC already live since 21 May 2026 and the non‑OECD export ban approaching on 21 November 2026, the window for compliance preparation is narrow. Organisations that act now, securing DIWASS access, updating Annex VII documentation packs, re‑vetting carriers and revising procurement contracts, will be best positioned to avoid enforcement action and operational disruption. Those seeking specialist guidance on Germany’s waste shipment rules can consult an environmental law practitioner through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Gregor Franßen at Franßen & Nusser Rechtsanwälte PartGmbB, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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