Digital Product Passport (DPP) / product transparency tool
Physical product tracing / tagging solution
Blippa
Blippa is a no-code Digital Product Passport platform designed for brands and retailers in apparel, textiles, and related sectors to achieve ESPR-compliant product transparency through QR code generation and customizable consumer-facing pages. It supports SMEs with features like AI-powered data collection, over 40 data integrations, and structured traceability for suppliers, product compositions, and sustainability impacts including LCA data and risk assessments. The tool enables data input via manual entry, bulk uploads, and APIs, with live implementations at brands like Nudie Jeans and active development for EU DPP registry integration.
AI-generated from all supplier submitted data.
Quick facts
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Use case or testimonial
Started (year)
Country of origin
SME adaption
API integration approach
Free test version
LCA frameworks supported
Primary data contributors
Details
Description by tool provider
Blippa is a no-code Digital Product Passport (DPP) platform enabling ESPR-compliant product transparency. Features QR code generation, 40+ data integrations, AI-powered data collection, and customizable consumer-facing pages. Used by brands like Nudie Jeans.
Product segments covered by the tool
- Apparel
- Home textiles
- Textile & leather accessories and goods -
- Footwear
- Furniture
- Other non-textile products
Platform technologies
- Software-as-a-Service (SaaS)
- Cloud-hosted platform
- Multi-tenant system design
- Relational database
- Role-based access control (RBAC)
- AI/Machine learning models
- QR code tagging
Data input/output methods
- Manual data entry
- Bulk upload/export (Excel / CSV)
- Inbound APIs
- Outbound APIs
- Event-based APIs (webhooks, outbound)
- Reporting export
Chemical substance traceability
Chain-of-custody is a continuity capability; composition and substance traceability are depth capabilities. Neither replaces the other.
- Supplier visibility/supply chain mapping - The system stores structured information about suppliers beyond Tier 1 (e.g. role, tier, location).
- Product–supplier association - Specific products (styles, SKUs, batches) are linked to the suppliers involved in their production.
- Product composition / component traceability - Products are represented as structured compositions (e.g. components, ingredients) that can be independently traced to upstream sources.
Sustainability Impact categories
Impact data coverage describes which sustainability-related topics a platform can store and manage data for. It does not indicate the quality of the data, the methodology used, or whether impacts meet specific regulatory thresholds.
- Material attributes - (e.g. fiber type, recycled / biobased content, origin attributes)
- Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) data - (e.g. environmental footprint indicators at product or material level)
- Carbon & energy data - (e.g. GHG emissions, energy use, Scope-related data)
- Chemical impact & compliance data - (e.g. restricted substances, chemical inventories, compliance status)
- Supplier processes & practices - (e.g. production processes, management systems, operational practices)
Types of sustainability impact data
Impact data coverage indicates what topics a system can handle; traceability capabilities indicate how precisely that data can be linked to products, materials, and processes.
- Qualitative data - (e.g. yes/no answers, self-assessments, policy statements)
- Quantitative data - (e.g. numeric values, measurements, calculated indicators)
- Certificates & formal attestations - (e.g. certificates linked to suppliers, materials, or products)
Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) handling
Product carbon footprint (PCF) calculations represent a single impact category and do not constitute a full Life Cycle Assessment (LCA), which covers multiple environmental impact categories across the product life cycle
LCA results from external tools can be imported and stored - (e.g. impact indicators calculated elsewhere);
Risk assessment support
Risk assessment functionality indicates whether a platform supports identifying, prioritising, or visualising potential sustainability or compliance risks. Approaches vary significantly between tools and may rely on user-defined criteria, predefined rules, or system-generated indicators. Risk assessments are intended to support prioritisation and decision-making. They do not in themselves constitute legal compliance or due diligence.
Manual or externally defined risk assessments can be stored - (e.g. risk ratings entered by users or imported from external sources);
Value chain actors involved in data exchange
- Brand / retailer users - (e.g. internal teams managing products, suppliers, or reporting)
- Consumers or external stakeholders - (e.g. read-only access via QR/DPP)
Consumer-facing access to product data
- Consumer-facing product views are provided - (e.g. via QR code, URL, or Digital Product Passport interface)
- External stakeholder access (read-only) - (e.g. regulators, auditors, partners)
- Consumer-facing content is configurable by the brand - (e.g. control over which data is displayed)
Digital Product Passport (DPP) development activity
Live DPP implementations with fashion brands (Nudie Jeans, Eton). Full ESPR compliance focus including QR-linked product pages with material composition, care instructions, and supply chain data. Active development on EU DPP registry integration.
EU regulatory readiness
Regulatory readiness reflects how a provider monitors and responds to evolving EU sustainability and supply chain regulations. It does not constitute a claim of legal compliance, as regulatory scope and timelines are still evolving.
ESPR is core to our roadmap. We monitor EUR-Lex for delegated acts and align schemas to emerging requirements. Customer pilots run textile DPPs ahead of 2027 mandate. Our AI agent (dppagent.com) provides real-time regulatory guidance.