The DPP is becoming increasingly important as part of the European sustainability strategy. The aim is to make relevant information – such as origin, materials, reparability or recyclability – available digitally throughout the entire life cycle of a product. This should not only increase transparency in the supply chain, but also promote a circular economy and responsible consumption.
What technical and organisational requirements need to be put in place to ensure interoperability and data quality across different stakeholders, sectors and life cycle phases as part of the Digital Product Passport?
2 Answers
Anonymous User
The requirements for the database properties are regulated in the following standards, which are currently only available in draft form:
- Interoperability – prEN 18223
- Data quality across different stakeholders, sectors and life cycle
- prEN 18246 (data authentication, reliability, integrity)
- further relevant standards are:
prEN 18216
prEN 18219
prEN 18220
prEN 18221
prEN 18222
prEN 18249
Anonymous User
Thanks for raising this important question Jada. I’ll share the question in our new DPP – Digital Product Passport group, where many experts from different sectors are already active. It’s the best place to gather perspectives on the technical and organisational requirements needed for the DPP.