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Digital Product Passports (DPPs): Transforming Food Traceability and Supply Chain Transparency

Learn how Digital Product Passports (DPPs) are improving food traceability, supply chain transparency, sustainability, and regulatory compliance. Discover how FoodTraze enables DPP-ready supply chains with blockchain-powered traceability.

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Updated on June 18, 2026 2 mins read

Businesses worldwide are under increasing pressure to demonstrate transparency, sustainability, and accountability across their supply chains. Consumers want to know where products come from- regulators are demanding greater visibility into product lifecycles, and organizations are seeking better ways to manage compliance and sustainability reporting. 

To support these goals, the European Union has introduced the Digital Product Passport (DPP) under the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR). While initially focused on product categories such as textiles, electronics, and furniture, the principles behind DPPs have far-reaching implications for industries that rely heavily on traceability, including food and agriculture. 

For organizations already investing in digital traceability solutions, DPPs represent not just a regulatory requirement but an opportunity to build more transparent, resilient, and sustainable supply chains. 

Why Digital Product Passports Are Gaining Global Attention 

Supply chains have become increasingly complex. Products often pass through multiple suppliers, manufacturers, distributors, and retailers before reaching consumers. As a result, obtaining reliable information about a product's origin, composition, environmental impact, and lifecycle has become a significant challenge. 

Digital Product Passports address this challenge by creating a standardized digital record that travels with a product throughout its lifecycle. 

The benefits are substantial: 
Improved product transparency and traceability 
Enhanced sustainability reporting 
Better support for repair, reuse, and recycling initiatives 
Increased consumer trust 
Streamlined regulatory compliance 
Greater visibility across supply chains 
Support for circular economy objectives 

As governments and industries continue to prioritize sustainability and responsible sourcing, Digital Product Passports are expected to become a foundational element of future supply chain ecosystems. 

What Is a Digital Product Passport (DPP)? 

A Digital Product Passport (DPP) is a digital record that stores and shares important information about a product throughout its lifecycle. 

Introduced through the EU's Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR), DPPs are designed to improve transparency, sustainability, repairability, and circularity by making key product information easily accessible to relevant stakeholders. 

A Digital Product Passport may include: 
Product identity and unique identifiers 
Materials and components used 
Environmental footprint and sustainability data 
Compliance and certification information 
Manufacturing and supply chain details 
Repair and maintenance instructions 
Recycling and end-of-life guidance 

For example, a textile product's DPP might contain information about fabric composition, country of origin, care instructions, recycled content, and recycling recommendations. 

By creating a standardized digital record, DPPs ensure that critical product information remains accessible throughout the product's lifecycle. 

How Digital Product Passports work 
Digital Product Passport information is linked to a unique product identifier and can be accessed through multiple technologies. 

QR Codes 
The most widely adopted method is a QR code placed on the product, packaging, or label. 

Scan QR Code → Access Digital Passport → View Product Information 
This enables consumers, businesses, recyclers, and regulators to instantly retrieve relevant information. 

Barcodes 
Existing barcode systems can also be connected to DPP records, providing another method for accessing product information. 

RFID and NFC Technologies 
Industries such as manufacturing, logistics, furniture, and electronics may utilize RFID or NFC tags to provide secure access to Digital Product Passport data. 

Central Digital Registry 
The European Commission is also developing a centralized digital registry that will store and validate DPP identifiers, helping ensure consistency and accessibility across the ecosystem. 

Who Can Access a Digital Product Passport? 

Digital Product Passports are designed to serve multiple stakeholders across the supply chain. 

These may include: 
Consumers 
Manufacturers 
Suppliers 
Retailers and distributors 
Repair service providers 
Recyclers 
Customs authorities 
Regulatory and market surveillance agencies 

To protect sensitive business information, DPPs use role-based access controls. This ensures that each stakeholder only accesses the information relevant to their role and authorization level. 

For example, consumers may access sustainability and product origin information, while regulatory authorities may have access to more detailed compliance and certification data. 

The Business Value of DPP-Ready Food Traceability 

Organizations that embrace digital traceability today can gain significant advantages tomorrow. 

Benefits include: 
Improved supply chain visibility 
Enhanced food safety and recall readiness 
Stronger consumer trust and brand credibility 
Better regulatory compliance 
Increased operational efficiency 
Improved sustainability reporting 
Greater resilience against supply chain disruptions 

As regulations and consumer expectations continue to evolve, businesses that establish robust digital traceability systems will be better prepared for the future. 

How FoodTraze Powers Smarter Digital Product Passports 
FoodTraze serves as a powerful foundation for Digital Product Passports, helping businesses create transparent, trustworthy, and data-driven supply chains. 

Complete Traceability Across the Product Journey 
FoodTraze enables end-to-end visibility by tracking products from their source materials through every stage of production, processing, transportation, and delivery. This creates a clear and connected record of a product's lifecycle. 

Real-Time Data Visibility 
As products move through the supply chain, FoodTraze continuously captures and updates relevant information. This ensures stakeholders always have access to the latest product and supply chain data. 

Seamless Integration of Multiple Data Sources 

FoodTraze brings together information from a wide range of participants and systems, including: 
Suppliers and producers 
Manufacturers and processors 
Logistics and transportation partners 
Certification and compliance bodies 

By consolidating data from multiple sources, FoodTraze creates a single, reliable view of product information. 

Tamper-Resistant and Verifiable Records 

Leveraging blockchain technology, FoodTraze maintains secure and immutable records that help ensure data integrity. This makes product information more trustworthy, auditable, and resistant to unauthorized modifications. 

Proactive Risk Monitoring 

FoodTraze helps organizations identify and respond to potential issues before they escalate. The platform can detect: 
Supplier-related risks 
Data gaps or missing information 
Unusual supply chain activities 
Potential compliance and regulatory concerns 

 Controlled and Secure Data Sharing 

With granular access controls, FoodTraze allows businesses to determine exactly who can access specific information. This enables secure collaboration while protecting sensitive business data. 

By combining traceability, transparency, and secure data management, FoodTraze transforms Digital Product Passports from simple records into dynamic tools that support compliance, risk management, sustainability, and supply chain resilience. 

Building Trust Through Digital Product Passports

As supply chains become increasingly interconnected, Digital Product Passports are evolving beyond regulatory compliance.

They are becoming strategic tools that help organizations:
Build consumer trust

Improve transparency

Strengthen sustainability initiatives

Reduce operational risk

Improve regulatory readiness

Enhance supply chain resilience

Organizations that establish strong digital traceability systems today will be better prepared for the future of global trade and sustainability requirements.

Conclusion

Digital Product Passports are set to play a major role in the future of supply chain transparency and sustainability. By creating standardized, accessible, and verifiable product records, DPPs help businesses meet growing expectations around accountability, compliance, and responsible sourcing.

For the food and agriculture industry, the opportunity is particularly significant. As consumers and regulators demand greater visibility into how food is produced and distributed, traceability will become a competitive necessity.

FoodTraze helps organizations prepare for this future through blockchain-powered traceability, real-time supply chain visibility, and secure data management.

By combining Digital Product Passports with advanced food traceability solutions, businesses can build supply chains that are not only compliant but also more transparent, resilient, and trusted by stakeholders worldwide.