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How to prepare for the EU’s Digital Product Passport Law

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How to prepare for the EU’s Digital Product Passport Law

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Clothes and shoes are about to get a digital update, at least in Europe. 

The European Union formally adopted the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation, or ESPR, in June. The legislation empowers the European Commission to set specific sustainable and ethical design and reporting requirements for nearly all products sold on the European market, including textiles and apparel items, detailed in the EU’s Strategy for Sustainable and Circular Textiles.

One key requirement is the Digital Product Passport, often abbreviated DPP. These digital tags will provide easy links to an online database of information including materials tracing and manufacturing information.

The details of what will be required in each DPP will be established by the European Commission by December 31, 2025, according to a webinar given in May. Businesses will have 18 months following that date to comply. Because the ESPR requirements apply to nearly all products placed on the European market, this means that even the smallest businesses will need to learn how to create and implement this technology.

What do DPPs look like? 

“The principal objective of the digital product passport is to enable and simplify access to relevant information,” William Neale, circular economy adviser in the European Commission’s Directorate General of environment, said in the May webinar. 

This means creating a Digital Product Passport is about more than generating a QR code, said supply chain tracking technology company TrusTrace in a new report on DPPs. The information carrier, which might be a QR code, RFID tag, NFC tag, or watermark, is just the final piece of technology that gives customers and other users access to this data.

Definitions of Data Carriers

Source: TrusTrace

RFID Tag: Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags are smart labels within a tracking system that uses radio frequency to search, identify, track, and communicate information stored in the tag.

QR Code: Quick response (QR) codes are barcodes that are readable by digital devices containing a code reader, like smartphones, for example. When the code is scanned, the device accesses the information connected to that code, usually via a URL, SMS or a similar means of linking to digital information.

NFC Tag: Near-field communication technology (NFT) allows two devices to communicate wirelessly. The technology can be embedded in a small tag to facilitate data transfer between nearby electronic devices, such as smartphones and laptops.

Watermark: Watermarking is the process of hiding digital information in a carrier signal, whereby it cannot be easily noticed. Covert watermarks can be integrated into printed artworks such as on labels or packaging, which when scanned by those aware of their presence, reveal the product information.

What information is required?

In its report, TrusTrace identified 125 potential data points companies might need to address, according to ESPR guidelines. The points cover nine categories and will include information such as supply chain details, material composition, as well as information on a product’s circularity, compliance and sustainability (the latter framed within the bounds of the EU’s anti-greenwashing legislation, the Green Claims Directive).

Rather than wait for full details to be released at the end of 2025,TrusTrace said brands should establish a list of potential data points now so that they can begin collecting data.

Eventually, the type of data will be standardized, although the storage of DPP data will be “decentralized”, according to the ESPR text. That means each company is responsible for maintaining its own online repository of information and making that available to consumers and other parties. Failure to comply will result in penalties, according to the law’s final text, which could “include fines and time-limited exclusion from public procurement procedures.”

How to get started

TrusTrace is involved in an ongoing DPP pilot project launched in 2022 with Finnish textile company Marimekko and Swedish clothing brand Kappahl. Based on the pilot, which processed more than 3,000 garments, TrusTrace said in its report that the first step for brands is to evaluate whether they are currently collecting the data needed to comply with these new regulations. Then brands will need to determine when and where in the production process they want to collect data and how this data will be stored and accessed. Once brands better understand this process, they can then reach out to data management companies.

Through its pilot program, TrusTrace found that neither brand had all of the potential data points, and both brands said in the report that “obtaining the DPP data for the pilot was, in some cases, resource intensive and difficult.”


“Of course, technology can solve some of these problems, but at the moment the data is manually keyed in by people.”

Marimekko

Finnish textile company


To implement Digital Product Passports successfully, data collection will need to be baked into supply chains, Marjut Lovio, sustainability manager at Marimekko, said in the report. 

“From my perspective, in order to pull all the data from a complex supply chain we need agents in between [stakeholders] to take care of the data management,” Marimekko said. “Of course, technology can solve some of these problems, but at the moment the data is manually keyed in by people.”

Marimekko is also “keeping an eye for the development of several options, from ‘forensic’ fibre-level physical tracers, through to software solutions,” according to the report. 

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