10.21.22
Avery Dennison’s atma.io connected product cloud joins the CIRPASS consortium, bringing together a core network of leading organizations in building the European vision for a unified Digital Product Passport (DPP) approach across multiple value chains.
Funded by the European Commission under the Digital Europe Programme, CIRPASS aims to prepare the ground for the gradual piloting and deployment of the DPPs from 2023 onwards, with an initial focus on the electronics, batteries and textile sectors.
On Oct. 5, 2022, the new CIRPASS (Collaborative Initiative for a Standards-based Digital Product Passport for Stakeholder-Specific Sharing of Product Data for a Circular Economy) project officially kicked off with a hybrid meeting taking place in Brussels.
The circular economy will replace wasteful linear economies by 2029, according to the 2019 Gartner study. To get there requires turning around the linear supply chain system to create a whole circular ecosystem.
Through the DPP, CIRPASS helps in laying the foundation for such an ecosystem across value chains in three sectors: batteries, electronics and textiles, based on common rules, principles, taxonomy and standards. Specifically, the project aims to deliver at least three DPP prototypes for the three sectors as well as reaching agreements on key data for circularity and sustainability.
“Joining the CIRPASS consortium as an associate partner, Avery Dennison’s atma.io connected product cloud actively supports the work packages on DPP prototypes and recommendations, and on DPP systems plus frameworks to develop and deliver a DPP system architecture that includes dataspace integration, identification schemes with unique product IDs and implementation guidelines,” Max Winograd, VP connected products at Avery Dennison Smartrac, said. “Our work, in close collaboration with other project partners, will create standards-based DPP prototypes and an implementation blueprint for deploying an interoperable digital product passport sustainably at scale.”
Funded by the European Commission under the Digital Europe Programme, CIRPASS aims to prepare the ground for the gradual piloting and deployment of the DPPs from 2023 onwards, with an initial focus on the electronics, batteries and textile sectors.
On Oct. 5, 2022, the new CIRPASS (Collaborative Initiative for a Standards-based Digital Product Passport for Stakeholder-Specific Sharing of Product Data for a Circular Economy) project officially kicked off with a hybrid meeting taking place in Brussels.
The circular economy will replace wasteful linear economies by 2029, according to the 2019 Gartner study. To get there requires turning around the linear supply chain system to create a whole circular ecosystem.
Through the DPP, CIRPASS helps in laying the foundation for such an ecosystem across value chains in three sectors: batteries, electronics and textiles, based on common rules, principles, taxonomy and standards. Specifically, the project aims to deliver at least three DPP prototypes for the three sectors as well as reaching agreements on key data for circularity and sustainability.
“Joining the CIRPASS consortium as an associate partner, Avery Dennison’s atma.io connected product cloud actively supports the work packages on DPP prototypes and recommendations, and on DPP systems plus frameworks to develop and deliver a DPP system architecture that includes dataspace integration, identification schemes with unique product IDs and implementation guidelines,” Max Winograd, VP connected products at Avery Dennison Smartrac, said. “Our work, in close collaboration with other project partners, will create standards-based DPP prototypes and an implementation blueprint for deploying an interoperable digital product passport sustainably at scale.”