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Digital Product Passport

Digital Product Passport (DPP) — Structured digital record of product identity, composition, and recycling info, mandated by EU ESPR regulation.

Digital Product Passport (DPP)

A Digital Product Passport is a standardized, machine-readable dataset that accompanies a physical product throughout its lifecycle — from manufacturing to end-of-life recycling. Mandated by the EU Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR), the DPP aims to create complete transparency about a product’s materials, origin, environmental impact, repairability, and recycled content.

Key Facts

DetailInformation
Legal basisRegulation (EU) 2024/1781 — Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR)
First product categoriesBatteries (February 2027), then textiles, electronics, construction materials
Electronics DPPExpected 2028–2030 (delegated acts pending)
Data carrierQR code, RFID, NFC, or data matrix linked to a unique product ID
Data locationDecentralized — manufacturer-hosted with registry lookup via EU DPP registry
Access levelsPublic (consumers), restricted (authorities, recyclers), confidential (manufacturer)

What Information Does a DPP Contain?

For Electronics / Hardware Products

Data CategoryExamples
Product identityUnique serial number, manufacturer, model, manufacturing date/location
Material compositionBill of materials, substances of concern (SCIP database link), conflict minerals
Environmental footprintCarbon footprint per unit, energy consumption during use, lifecycle assessment
RepairabilityRepair score, spare parts availability, disassembly instructions, expected lifetime
Software componentsSBOM reference — cross-link to CRA-mandated Software Bill of Materials
Recycled contentPercentage of recycled materials per component category
End-of-lifeRecycling instructions, hazardous waste classification, take-back program
Supply chainEU/non-EU manufacturing origin, due diligence declarations
ComplianceCE marking status, applicable directives, conformity certificates

DPP vs. SBOM

The DPP and SBOM are complementary but distinct:

AspectDigital Product PassportSBOM (Software Bill of Materials)
RegulationESPR (Ecodesign)CRA (Cybersecurity)
ScopeEntire product (physical + digital)Software/firmware components only
PurposeSustainability, circularity, transparencyCybersecurity, vulnerability management
ContentMaterials, carbon footprint, repairability, recycled contentPackage names, versions, licenses, vulnerabilities
Target audienceConsumers, recyclers, market surveillanceSecurity teams, DevOps, regulatory authorities
OverlapReferences SBOM for software componentsPart of the DPP’s digital component inventory

For hardware manufacturers: You will need both. The CRA requires an SBOM for cybersecurity; the ESPR requires a DPP for sustainability. The SBOM becomes a component within the broader DPP.

Technical Architecture

┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  PHYSICAL PRODUCT                                │
│  ┌─────────────┐                                 │
│  │ QR Code/NFC │ → links to unique product URI   │
│  └──────┬──────┘                                 │
└─────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┘
          │ Scan / read

┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  EU DPP REGISTRY (centralized lookup)            │
│  Maps product URI → manufacturer data endpoint   │
└─────────┬───────────────────────────────────────┘
          │ Redirect

┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  MANUFACTURER DATA ENDPOINT                      │
│  • Public data: materials, repair, carbon        │
│  • Restricted data: detailed BOM (authorities)   │
│  • Confidential data: trade secrets              │
│  • SBOM cross-reference (CRA compliance)         │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

Timeline for Electronics

PhaseTimelineWhat Happens
BatteriesFebruary 2027First product category with DPP requirement
Textiles2027–2028Clothing and footwear DPP
Electronics2028–2030 (expected)Consumer electronics, IoT devices, embedded systems
Full rolloutBy 2030Most product categories covered by category-specific delegated acts

Relevance for EU Hardware Supply Chain

For manufacturers with a 100% EU supply chain, DPP compliance is simpler:

  • Origin transparency — EU-sourced components have traceable supply chains.
  • Environmental data — EU suppliers are subject to consistent environmental reporting (CSRD).
  • Conflict minerals — EU sourcing eliminates due diligence complexity for conflict minerals.
  • Recycled content — EU recycling infrastructure provides verifiable recycled material certification.
  • SBOM — The software-specific component of a DPP, covering firmware and software dependencies.
  • CE Marking — DPP compliance status is linked to the product’s conformity declaration.
  • CRA — The cybersecurity regulation that mandates the SBOM component referenced by the DPP.