
Table of Contents
- What are DPPs?
- Implementation Timeline
- Who is affected?
- What information is required?
- How do DPPs work?
- How do you set up a DPP?
- How we can help
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What are Digital Product Passports?
Digital Product Passports (DPPs) are innovative tools designed to collect, aggregate, and share comprehensive data about a product throughout its entire lifecycle. From raw material sourcing to end-of-life management, DPPs provide essential information on a product’s provenance, authenticity, sustainability, and circularity. This system enhances transparency and empowers businesses, consumers, and regulators to make informed decisions that support sustainability goals.
DPPs play a crucial role under the European Union’s Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) and a number of further sectoral legislation on batteries, toys, detergents, etc., making them an essential component in global efforts to achieve sustainability and climate targets.
Why Digital Product Passports matter
Environmental and economic impact
Through improving the availability of information and tracking chemicals and materials, DPPs help reduce environmental impacts by encouraging sustainable sourcing, and promoting recycling and reuse. They also support compliance with sustainability regulations, reduction of waste, and optimised resource efficiency.
Key benefits for stakeholders
For businesses, DPPs offer enhanced supply chain visibility, streamlined reporting processes, and a significant competitive advantage in the marketplace. Consumers benefit from the ability to make informed purchasing decisions based on transparent sustainability data, allowing them to choose products that align with their environmental values. Regulators find DPPs invaluable for simplifying compliance tracking, verifying that products meet environmental standards, and ensuring that sustainability criteria are consistently upheld.
The evolution of DPPs
The concept of Digital Product Passports (DPPs) emerged from the growing need for greater supply chain transparency and sustainability. This initiative was spearheaded by the European Commission as part of the broader European Green Deal, aimed at fostering a circular economy and reducing environmental impacts.
Key milestones and implementation timeline

Who needs to implement DPPs?
The implementation of Digital Product Passports impacts a broad range of industries that produce goods for the European Union (EU) market. The obligation to comply extends beyond manufacturers to include importers, distributors, and retailers who play a role in the product lifecycle.
Industries affected
DPPs will initially apply to sectors with significant environmental impacts, including:
- Electronics: Covering devices such as smartphones, laptops, and other consumer electronics, where materials sourcing, energy efficiency, and recyclability are critical.
- Batteries (under Battery Regulation): Particularly for industrial and electric vehicle batteries, focusing on raw material sourcing, durability, and end-of-life recycling.
- Textiles: Including garments and footwear, with emphasis on sustainable materials, production processes, and waste reduction.
- Furniture: With a particular focus on resource use.
- Tyres: Although already regulated by other EU legislation (such as the Tyre Labelling Regulation (EU) 2020/740), there is a gap which ESPR can fill on recyclability and recycled content.
- Construction Materials: Focussing on energy use and resource efficiency. Intermediate products like steel and aluminium will be covered under the ESPR, while other products, such as insulation materials, will be covered under the revised Construction Products Regulation with differing rules on DPP.
The ESPR Regulation aims to regulate 30 product groups by 2030; by introducing requirements to intermediate products such as aluminium, steel & iron, chemicals, potentially plastics & polymers, the impact will cascade down to a vast number of sectors. Furthermore, the DPP is expected to be implemented by a number of other sectorial legislation, further extending the scope to toys, detergents, etc.
What information is included in a Digital Product Passport?
Delegated Acts under the ESPR will set out information requirements of the DPP. These are expected to include:
- Basic Product Data: Make, model, batch, etc.
- Material Data: Origin, quantity, properties.
- Environmental Data: Life cycle environmental impacts including resource use, water consumption, and emissions.
- Substances of Concern (SoC): Information on substances of concern with hazardous properties or that may bear an impact on the reusability and recyclability of the materials.
- Use Data: Product performance, durability, energy use.
- End-of-Life Data: Reuse, recycling, disposal instructions.
How Digital Product Passports work: the technology behind DPPs
Digital Product Passports rely on a combination of technologies that work together to ensure the secure, accurate, and efficient sharing of product data across the supply chain.
Harmonised standards will be developed by the European Standardisation Organisations CEN/CENELEC to address the minimum requirements of the DPP-system. However, these standards will remain technology-neutral. Companies can implement the technology of their preferences, or work with a service provider as long as they meet the requirements set in the legislation and harmonised standards.
Technical challenges in adoption
Implementing Digital Product Passports (DPPs) comes with several challenges, particularly around data privacy and security. Ensuring the protection of sensitive information while maintaining transparency can be complex, especially in industries dealing with proprietary technologies and intellectual property. Additionally, the high implementation costs can be a barrier for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), making it challenging for them to allocate resources towards compliance. Complex supply chains with multiple stakeholders further complicate data collection and management, requiring robust coordination and standardised processes.
A more imminent challenge businesses face in implementing DPPs stems from the demanding extent of information requirements. Providing detailed sustainable performance data for entire product portfolios requires scalable technology solutions for gathering, calculating, and managing data.
How to set up a DPP that meets future regulatory requirements
Digital Product Passports (DPPs) offer far more than compliance—they can become powerful tools for innovation, transparency, and competitive advantage. By developing and implementing a robust Design for Sustainability programme, your organisation can not only meet DPP requirements but also embed ecodesign principles directly into product development and modification processes.
The data collected and consolidated through DPPs can be leveraged to substantiate environmental claims, supporting credible and transparent communication with stakeholders. Furthermore, by understanding and addressing the optional data needs of your customers, DPPs can be transformed into valuable marketing assets that drive growth and strengthen your brand’s sustainability credentials.
How Anthesis can help
Our team combines extensive industry knowledge with a forward-thinking approach, tailoring solutions to align with each organisation’s unique goals. Through our advisory services and digital solutions, we help you transform the products you create to drive better environmental and social impact, while expanding market opportunity and business resilience. Anthesis can support you to navigate DPP through ensuring compliance, enabling data management, and taking your DPP beyond compliance to becoming a brand asset.

Ensuring compliance
Preparing for Digital Product Passport (DPP) compliance requires a proactive and strategic approach. Key steps include:
- Understanding the legal requirements of the DPP and potential impacts to your business by conducting a readiness assessment. The window from when the full data and technical requirements will be available, to the deadline for implementation, will be incredibly short. It is therefore essential to monitor activities and discussions within stakeholders and peers.
- Mapping and collecting relevant data from the supply chain.
- Circularity assessments, full or partial LCAs to generate the necessary data to show compliance with performance requirements.
- Designing your DPP by selecting the most appropriate technical features and integrating the data in the necessary format to meet your reporting requirements.
Effectively managing data with Anthesis Compliance Suite
Our Compliance Suite enables digital data management and combines technology, data structures, workflow automation and process operations. The system can be deployed as a comprehensive data hub for the DPP. It comes with predefined data structures, based on international data standards and best practices, real-time analytics on data quality and reporting interfaces to your existing software infrastructure.

The solution covers client requirements out of the box and can be set up within two weeks. The system allows for piloting and ramp-up phases, with an increased focus on design customisations, process streamlining and extension of data structures.
Anthesis provides qualified resources and expertise to operate the supplier campaign process from beginning to end. With an actively managed request campaign, clients can increase the submission rate and data quality significantly. Our team will also validate incoming submissions and can digitise unstructured data records.
The future of Digital Product Passports
More and more EU legislation will require the DPP for products such as detergents, and toys. Whilst these efforts mainly focus on product and downstream activities, more intermediate products will be included and eventually upstream value chain will also use DPP as the key communication tool of sustainability and other information, of sustainability and other information,
Businesses will want to include information beyond what’s required by legislation, to make it as useful for their customers and stakeholders as possible, and eventually also use DPPs as the one true source of information feeding into their sustainability reporting data, green claims substantiation and more.
Resources
- CIRPASS and CIRPASS-2 Projects: Project Results
- WBCSD Report: Digital Product Passport Insights
- EU Green Deal and CEAP: Official regulatory documents
- The EU ESPR Regulation
Ready to implement Digital Product Passports in your business? Contact us for expert guidance on compliance, data management, and sustainability strategies.