Expert's Opinion

From Labelexpo to LOUPE & the Next Decade of Narrow-Web 

Jules Lejeune talks about the changes and acceletation of FINAT, as well as how the European perspective is relevant to a global audience.

By: Jules Lejeune

Managing Director, FINAT

For over three decades, Labelexpo Europe has been the global meeting point for the label and narrow-web community, and FINAT has stood alongside it as a long-term association partner. The move from Labelexpo to LOUPE (Labels and OUter Packaging Embellishment) from 2026 is more than a rebrand. It signals a structural shift: (self-adhesive) labels remain the anchor, while the ecosystem widens, geographically and technologically, towards adjacent narrow-web and outer-packaging embellishment.

FINAT’s Scope

FINAT is the European home for narrow-web label converters and their suppliers. Its goal is to empower the European narrow-web label industry as it evolves, and offer clear value to current and next-generation professionals, at both small and large companies. Rooted in self-adhesive labels, FINAT actively tracks and supports other current and emerging narrow-web applications such as sleeves, pouches, IML, and selected flexible packaging.

FINAT’s goal is to describe change and help members prepare for it, turning trends into practical options: roadmaps, skills, guidance, and credible connections across the wider packaging and recycling ecosystem.

20 Years of Change & 10 Years of Acceleration

For the last 20 years, labels have evolved from a mainly print-and-convert self-adhesive application into an increasingly integral packaging and information layer, intensifying their critical, high-value role in branding, protection, compliance, and, increasingly, traceability. The last decade accelerated the shift: shorter runs, faster changeovers, and rising SKU complexity put a premium on flexibility, speed, and repeatability.

Technology also moved from incremental press improvements to workflow-led competitiveness: automation, inspection, colour control, and data discipline. But the biggest change is structural: convergence. Self-adhesive labels remain the anchor, yet the industry shift towards the broader application of narrow-web technologies stands at the core of where we are going. Sleeves, IML, and selected flexible packaging increasingly share the same technology base and skillsets: printing, finishing, substrates, and digital workflow. Converters are exploring where narrow-web capabilities translate into new value, and where embellishment is becoming a stronger part of brand differentiation.

Recovery to Recalibration

From a European market perspective, the past cycle has been challenging. 2025 marked a shift from recovery into recalibration, with a recorded growth in the self-adhesive label materials consumption at 2%, in line with GDP. The market is more stable entering 2026, but growth is modest and uneven, and uncertainty remains the baseline.

Two signals stand out. First, demand is increasingly mixed by application: variable information printing linked to logistics and distribution has been structurally stronger than primary product labelling during periods of cautious consumer spending. Second, the mix of materials and functionality continues to evolve, driven by sustainability requirements, performance demands and the growing role of traceability. Proof is becoming the new currency: solutions must be compatible with recycling systems and compliance expectations.

What Comes Next

Looking ahead, we see three trendlines shaping the next few years.
 

  1. Sustainability moves from ambition to execution. In Europe, regulations like PPWR and customer requirements are pushing the market from intent to implementation. Companies increasingly need evidence-based design-for-recycling compatibility, credible data, and scalable end-of-life solutions. This is not only a European story: global brand owners and supply chains carry these requirements across regions.
  2. Circularity becomes a system challenge. It will scale when collection, sorting, recycling capacity and end markets become economically viable. That is why FINAT (and the CELAB-Europe consortium that it hosts) works, where needed, with key players in the wider packaging and recycling ecosystem: converters and their end-customers need solutions that are technically sound, operable at scale, and compliant as requirements evolve. Collaboration is not “nice to have”; it is strategic infrastructure.
  3. Digitalisation – and increasingly AI – become the productivity lever. Short runs, SKU proliferation and tighter turnaround expectations make automation, workflow discipline and data-driven process control more central to competitiveness. Traceability is also gaining momentum as a practical tool for supply-chain efficiency, compliance and circular systems.​​

A European Perspective with Global Relevance

FINAT’s scope is European, but the challenges are increasingly shared: circularity economics, traceability requirements, supply-chain due diligence, and the need to stay competitive while adapting to sustainability and compliance expectations. Our role is to keep the community informed, connected, and empowered: through market intelligence, education, technical work, standardisation, and pre-competitive collaboration platforms.

In the end, LOUPE is a timely signal. The industry is broadening, expectations are rising, and progress runs through connection: across applications, technologies, and the wider ecosystem that makes high-tech, circular, and compliant solutions possible.

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