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Event: Circular Textile Days

How can you, as a sector, prepare for the major challenges that affect every link in the supply chains? This question was central last week at the Circular Textile Days, where Clara Kuindersma and Gloria Carta went.

How can you, as a sector, prepare for the major challenges that affect every link in the supply chains? This question was central last week at the Circular Textile Days, where Clara Kuindersma and Gloria Carta went.

Challenges for the sector

The textile sector faces plenty of big challenges; long, hard-to-trace supply chains, production locations and markets that are connected over long distances, huge production and consumption volumes, an immense surplus of second-hand textiles, and a whole load of international legislation that is coming.

Digital Product Passport

The Digital Product Passport was perhaps the most frequently mentioned term these days. As part of the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation, producers will be required to add this passport to their products. And give insight in their chains and impact. Textile is one of the first sectors where the Digital Product Passport applies. But other sectors, you will have to follow as well.

Companies can, or must, already start preparing for this now. For example, by mapping their supply chain and collecting the corresponding data.

Gloria: “The Digital Product Passport asks a lot from companies, but once all the infrastructure is mapped out, we can expect many beneficial effects from it; on the level of manufacturers, consumers, and society as a whole.

The time of reckless pollution is over, and with all the sustainability legislation, we are really going to take the necessary steps. However, it is complex, and I understand that companies are still figuring out how to get started. My advice is to seek collaborations; you don’t have to do it alone."

Do you want to know more about the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation? Read the article down below.

Frequently asked questions

The Digital Product Passport is a requirement under the EU's Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation where producers must add a digital passport to their products. This passport is designed to give insight into a product's supply chain and its environmental impact.

The Digital Product Passport is being introduced as a key part of the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation. This EU legislation makes it mandatory for producers in scope to provide this passport to increase transparency about their products and supply chains.

A business can start preparing for the Digital Product Passport now by mapping its supply chain and collecting the relevant data. The article also advises seeking collaborations to manage the complexity, emphasizing that 'you don’t have to do it alone'.

The textile sector is one of the first sectors where the Digital Product Passport requirement applies. However, the regulation is not limited to textiles, as the article clearly states that other sectors will have to follow as well.

The Digital Product Passport is expected to have many beneficial effects for manufacturers, consumers, and society as a whole. It is viewed as a necessary step to end the era of 'reckless pollution' and advance sustainability through new legislation.

Read more about the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation
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This article is written by:
Clara
Clara
Head of Communications
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