NewsEU governing bodies give green light to digital product passport on provisional...

EU governing bodies give green light to digital product passport on provisional basis

The European Commission and the European Parliament have reached a provisional agreement to update the European Union’s sustainability product legislation. If formally approved, it will bring in a digital product passport to enhance transparency.

December 5, 2023 Angela Skujins

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Image: Richard Parmiter, Flickr

The European Commission and European Parliament have come to a provisional agreement to revise 2009 legislation – Ecodesign Directive 2009/125/EC – aimed at making products more energy-efficient, recyclable, and transparent.

Among the slew of Ecodesign amendments was the introduction of a digital product passport. The European Commission proposal states the passport is an electronic register of a product’s environmental sustainability data.

The aim of the passport is to facilitate and streamline the “monitoring and enforcement” of European Union and Member State legislation, which is expected to “increase transparency” for supply chain businesses and the general public.

If supported, the passport would be developed in an “open dialogue” with international partners to lower costs for sustainable investments, marketing, and compliance, among other factors. Industry associations, consumer organizations, non-governmental organizations, and international partners would also help build the passport’s technical specifications related to “traceability.”

The European Commission would retain the data, with customs officials and national governments also having access to ensure products comply with federal and European Union laws. Member states would impose national penalties for non-compliance.

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Food, feed, medical products for human use, veterinary products, living plants and animals, products of human origin, and plant and animal products related to future reproduction, would be exempt from having passports, according to the proposal.

The provisional agreement needs to be endorsed and formally adopted by the European Commission and European Parliament before coming into effect, according to the European Commission press release.

The news comes as the European Solar Manufacturing Council and SolarPower Europe were at alleged loggerheads over whether the European Union should ban products made with forced labor.

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