Ayurvedic Treatment For Myopia

DIGITAL PRODUCT PASSPORT
If you care where your products come from, what’s inside them, or how they’re made, you’re about to hear a lot more about something called a Digital Product Passport (DPP). It might sound futuristic, but soon, it could be an essential part of how we shop, work, and manufacture in a more transparent world.
Think of a Digital Product Passport as a digital record, attached to a physical product, containing all relevant data about its origin, composition, environmental impact, repairability, and end-of-life options. The information is accessible through a QR code, NFC chip, or another scannable method. Essentially, it’s a digital file that travels with your gadget, sneaker, or bottle of shampoo.
The push for DPPs is coming from all sides:
Consumers want to make smarter and greener purchases.
Brands need to prove their sustainability claims.
Governments—especially in the EU—are about to require it for everything from electronics to textiles.
In July 2025, “digital product passport” is trending.
A DPP typically covers:
Materials and Ingredients: What the product is made from, including chemicals used.
Manufacturing Details: Where, how, and by whom it was made—including labor standards.
Sustainability Data: Energy usage, carbon footprint, recyclability.
Care and Repair: Instructions, spare parts, repair shops, and upgrade guides.
Ownership and Service History (electronics, vehicles): Like a digital maintenance record.
Here’s what’s coming soon to both consumers and producers:
True Transparency: Scan a product in a store and know its full story.
Eco-Friendly Choices: Instantly compare brands for sustainability.
Easier Repairs: Find compatible parts or service centers with a simple scan
At The End
Comments