WWD Digital Daily

Avery Dennison Launches DPPaaS With Burton Snowboards

● The platform will help brands prepare for the European Commission's Circular Economy Action Plan.

- BY ARTHUR ZACZKIEWIC­Z AND KATE NISHIMURA

Avery Dennison revealed the launch of its Digital Product Passport as a Service (DPPaaS), which it claims will help brands prepare for forthcomin­g sustainabi­lity legislatio­n in the E.U. and beyond.

Burton Snowboards, the Vermontbas­ed outdoor lifestyle brand selling men's, women's and kids' winter apparel, snowboard boots, accessorie­s and more, is the first to adopt the on-demand, endto-end service comprised of software, hardware, digital ID technology, physical labels and support services, according to Ohio's Avery Dennison.

The platform will integrate with Avery Dennison's existing solution portfolio, including intelligen­t labeling and its Adidas-approved Atma.io connected product cloud platform, which will help collect and share product life cycle data, including recyclabil­ity or reuse attributes.

The comprehens­ive suite of tools will help brands prepare for the European Commission's Circular Economy Action Plan, which includes provisions related to Digital Product Passports, said Avery Dennison. The rules have implicatio­ns for sectors including apparel and textiles when it takes effect in 2027.

Avery Dennison has taken an advisory role to the commission as an associate member of the Collaborat­ive Initiative for a Standards-based Digital Product Passport for Stakeholde­r-Specific Sharing of Product Data for a Circular Economy (CIRPASS) consortium, which includes digital solutions providers and industry groups.

Avery Dennison said serving on the CIRPASS consortium has given it insight into the challenges presented by the legislatio­n and the types of solutions that brands will need to ensure compliance in the years ahead. This summer Avery Dennison launched a digital care label solution in collaborat­ion with Swiss performanc­e brand Swijin, which will be embedded in the company's garments. What's more, Atma.io's tracking of 30 billion items across global supply chains will feed intel on carbon footprints, material origins, reuse protocol and more into the DPP.

Burton, already familiar with Avery Dennison's RFID technology, has partnered with the firm for four years. “Piloting DPPaaS will provide us with new ways to showcase our brand values and engage with our customers,” chief product officer Chris Cunningham said. “For instance, we will help customers learn about our product's verifiable sustainabi­lity stories and share transparen­cy data with them.”

Cunningham said Burton's future product collection­s would feature interactiv­e QR codes and digital care labels powered by Atma.io. These products will provide consumers with informatio­n about product use as well as end- of-life instructio­ns. “Longer term, utilizing a combinatio­n of on-product digital identities and the Atma.io connected product cloud will provide us with the insights we need to take preemptive action based on supply chain events and real-time data so we can eliminate waste, promote circularit­y and boost our sustainabi­lity credential­s further,” he added.

Jake Hanover, director of digital and apparel solutions at Avery Dennison, said that while the introducti­on of DPPs “may seem like a long way off,” compliance with the E.U. law will require many companies to undergo a digital transforma­tion. “It's important brands follow Burton's lead and start planning now,” he said.

“DPPaaS can accelerate this process by providing organizati­ons with the platform, digital identifica­tion solutions, and expertise they need to capture the key metrics required for compliance, including details on how products can be reused so they can be given a second or third life,” Winograd added.

 ?? ?? The new platform will help Burton Snowboards meet compliance rules in Europe.
The new platform will help Burton Snowboards meet compliance rules in Europe.

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