Media Release – EPR Program Created by the Petroleum and Automotive Industry Approved in Colorado
• ColoradoLPMA’s independent and industry-led compliance program serves as a national model to improve recycling rates.
Colorado’s Individual Program Plan sets a national benchmark by giving producers choice, cutting costs, and delivering stronger recycling outcomes.
PALO ALTO, Calif. (Sept. 16, 2025) — The Lubricants Packaging Management Association (LPMA) powered by Interchange 360, today announced that the Colorado Department of Public Health & Environment (CDPHE) has officially approved its Individual Program Plan (IPP), making LPMA the first industry-led Producer Responsibility Organization (PRO) to secure approval under Colorado’s Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) law.

Colorado is the first state to give producers the choice to comply through independent programs rather than a single, one-size-fits-all PRO. LPMA’s approved IPP will manage petroleum- and automotive-related packaging, including oil and antifreeze containers, through a compliance model built by and for the lubricants industry.
“In my experience with EPR, it’s quite important that the focus is on results. The law shouldn’t prescribe how the results are met, but instead allow industry to be creative and innovative in developing a program that is highly accountable to the results,” said David Lawes, CEO of LPMA powered by Interchange 360. “Colorado’s EPR approach, allowing independent programs and providing producers with choices on how to comply, is best in the country. It sets the national benchmark for how producer responsibility can be done right.”
The approval underscores the value of independent, sector-specific compliance models. Lubricant packaging presents distinct challenges, including residual product and hazardous material handling, that general-purpose packaging programs, such as those serving all consumer packaging, are not equipped to address. LPMA’s model ensures compliance solutions that are safe, practical and effective.
LPMA is also active in other states with existing EPR laws, including California, Maine, Minnesota, Vermont and Oregon, and is preparing for additional rollouts as legislation expands nationwide.
“Colorado’s approval shows what’s possible when regulators and industry collaborate,” explained Lawes. “By working together, producers can cost-efficiently address our unique packaging needs and develop circular solutions. This approval is a win for producers, for Colorado and for the future of EPR in the United States. Colorado has shown real leadership by giving producers choice and flexibility, and LPMA is ready to prove that industry-led programs deliver the best results through an efficient, science-based, and results-driven compliance pathway that also fosters innovation in recycling.”
With approval secured, LPMA will begin producer onboarding and operational ramp-up under the approved IPP, supported by transparent reporting, state-aligned performance targets and member engagement. The association will continue working with regulators and stakeholders to ensure smooth implementation ahead of program launch in spring 2026.
For more general information, and for producers seeking more information on participation and compliance, visit www.interchange360.com.
About LPMA powered by Interchange 360
The Lubricants Packaging Management Association (LPMA) powered by Interchange 360, is a non-profit, industry-led Producer Responsibility Organization (PRO) established to help petroleum and automotive producers meet Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) obligations through sector-specific, practical solutions.
LPMA was founded by five leading petroleum companies: BP Lubricants USA, Inc. (Castrol), Chevron U.S.A. Inc., ExxonMobil Oil Corporation, Pennzoil-Quaker State d/b/a SOPUS Products (Shell), and VGP Holdings LLC (Valvoline Global). The association was created in response to the passage of EPR laws in several states. Recognizing the importance of environmental stewardship and the need for industry leadership, these companies developed a strategy to ensure petroleum and automotive products are responsibly managed as EPR laws expand across the United States. Together, they are committed to advancing sustainable practices, protecting industry interests, and contributing to global circularity goals.