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The Digital Product Passport: navigating the future of sustainable retail

28 November 2025

The manufacturing and retail sectors in Europe are standing on the precipice of a major transformation. As the European Union pushes forward with the ambitious European Green Deal, brands are partnering with platforms like AnchorPass to navigate the end of linear "take-make-waste" production models.

At the heart of this legislative shift is the Digital Product Passport (DPP). While it presents a significant compliance challenge, AnchorPass views it as a unique opportunity for forward-thinking brands to revolutionize their supply chain visibility and customer engagement.

What exactly is the digital product passport?

At its core, the DPP is a tool designed to gather data on a product and its supply chain and share it across the entire value chain so that all actors, including consumers, have a better understanding of the materials and products they use and their embodied environmental impact.

Think of it as a comprehensive "digital twin" of a physical item. By scanning a data carrier-such as a QR code, NFC tag, or RFID chip-embedded in the product, users can access a secure, decentralized record of that item's journey.

Unlike a standard label, the passport is dynamic. It travels with the product through its lifecycle, from raw material extraction to manufacturing, retail, usage, repair, and eventually, recycling.

The data behind the passport

The specific data requirements will vary by category, but the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) outlines several core pillars of information that brands must prepare for:

  • General product information: ID, weight, batch numbers, and manufacturing location.
  • Material composition: details on recycled content and the presence of substances of concern.
  • Sustainability metrics: carbon footprint, environmental footprint, and durability scores.
  • Circularity data: instructions for repair, disassembly guidelines for recyclers, and spare part availability.

Why the EU is mandating transparency

The goal of the European Commission is clear: to decouple economic growth from resource use. The current lack of data prevents circularity; recyclers don't know what is in a shirt, and repair shops don't have the schematics for a toaster.

The digital product passport solves this by creating an "transparency infrastructure." This allows for:

  • Higher recycling rates: waste management facilities can instantly identify materials.
  • Informed consumer choices: shoppers can verify green claims immediately.
  • Regulatory oversight: market surveillance authorities can easily check for compliance.

Which industries are first in line?

While the regulation will eventually cover almost all physical goods (excluding food, feed, and pharmaceuticals), the rollout is prioritized based on environmental impact.

  • Batteries: industrial and EV batteries will be the testing ground, with requirements expected as early as 2027.
  • Textiles and apparel: known for high environmental impact and low recycling rates, fashion is a top priority.
  • Consumer electronics: focusing on repairability and recovering valuable metals from e-waste.
  • Construction materials: aimed at improving the sustainability of the built environment.

Beyond compliance: the business case for AnchorPass

Viewing the digital product passport solely as a regulatory burden is a mistake. It is actually a powerful lever for business intelligence and brand equity.

Implementing a robust DPP strategy allows you to gain total visibility into your own supply chain, identifying inefficiencies and risks you didn't know existed. Furthermore, in an era where trust is the ultimate currency, giving customers transparent access to your sustainability data builds lasting loyalty.

AnchorPass is designed to simplify this transition. We provide the technological infrastructure to aggregate your supply chain data, generate compliant digital passports, and host them securely. We handle the complexity of the protocols so you can focus on building great, sustainable products.

The future of retail is transparent. Is your brand ready?