Supply chain traceability and vendor management system
Sustainability/ESG data management & reporting and DPP / product transparency tool
Retraced
Retraced is an AI-first platform designed for fashion supply chain transparency, enabling brands and suppliers in apparel, textiles, and footwear to digitize and trace multi-tier supply chains while ensuring compliance with standards through traceability, audits, and risk management. It supports shared data entry across value chain actors, including brands, suppliers, and consumers, with features like supplier mapping, product composition tracking, and sustainability impact data handling. Key strengths include AI-driven risk assessments, integration of LCA data, and consumer-facing digital product passports via QR codes, aligned with EU regulations.
AI-generated from all supplier submitted data.
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Blockchain implementation
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LCA frameworks supported
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Description by tool provider
Retraced is the AI-first platform for fashion supply chain transparency. We connect 175+ brands and 25,000+ suppliers to digitize and trace multi-tier supply chains, ensure compliance with legal and voluntary standards by managing traceability, certificates, audits, CAPA, risk and DPPs.
Product segments covered by the tool
- Apparel
- Home textiles
- Textile & leather accessories and goods -
- Footwear
Platform technologies
- Software-as-a-Service (SaaS)
- Cloud-hosted platform
- Multi-tenant system design
- Relational database
- Graph database
- Role-based access control (RBAC)
- Cryptographic integrity checks (hashing, signatures)
- Automated rules engine
- AI/Machine learning models
- QR code tagging
Data input/output methods
- Manual data entry
- Bulk upload/export (Excel / CSV)
- Scheduled file import/export
- Inbound APIs
- Outbound APIs
- Event-based APIs (webhooks, outbound)
- Reporting export
- Workflow automation
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.
- Material flow / chain-of-custody tracking - Material inputs, outputs, and transformations between supply-chain actors are recorded using a defined chain-of-custody model.
- 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)
- Water use & wastewater data - (e.g. water withdrawal, consumption, discharge, wastewater treatment data)
- Supplier processes & practices - (e.g. production processes, management systems, operational practices)
- Human rights & working conditions - (e.g. labor practices, social compliance data)
- Biodiversity & land use - (e.g. land-use impacts, deforestation-related data)
- Animal welfare - (e.g. animal-derived materials and related practices)
- Chemical impact & compliance data - (e.g. restricted substances, chemical inventories, compliance status)
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)
- Verification & audit evidence - (e.g. audit results, third-party verification status)
- Certificates & formal attestations - (e.g. certificates linked to suppliers, materials, or products)
- Calculated / derived indicators - (e.g. system-generated metrics based on underlying data)
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)
- Rule-based risk assessments are supported - (e.g. risks derived from predefined rules or thresholds)
- Data-driven risk indicators are generated by the system - (e.g. risk signals based on traceability or impact data)
- Risk visualisation and hotspot identification - (e.g. dashboards, maps, or prioritisation views)
Value chain actors involved in data exchange
- Brand / retailer users - (e.g. internal teams managing products, suppliers, or reporting)
- Tier 1 suppliers - (e.g. cut-and-sew factories, final assemblers)
- Tier 2 suppliers - (e.g. mills, dye houses, processors)
- Tier 3+ suppliers - (e.g. raw material processors, fiber producers)
- Service providers / auditors / certification bodies - (e.g. third-party verification or compliance actors)
- Consumers or external stakeholders - (e.g. read-only access via QR/DPP)
- Logistics or downstream partners - (e.g. distributors, recyclers, end-of-life actors)
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)
Digital Product Passport (DPP) development activity
Latest development of our long-standing style-level DPP: we evolved our product data model to support DPP at style, variant, SKU, and batch level. This enables brands to link mapped or traced multi-tier supply chains and share verified ESG data with consumers via QR codes or others.
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.
EU regulatory developments shape our roadmap. We continuously monitor new requirements and align functionality accordingly. A dedicated ESG legal & policy expert works with Policy Hub and, for ESPR/DPP, collaborates with partners active in CIRPASS-2 and JTC24 to ensure regulatory alignment.