Expert’s Opinion

Leibinger explores change from 2D code to Digital Product Passport

This new level of labeling transparency is made possible by the global adoption of GS1 2D codes.

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By: Greg Hrinya

Editor

By Aljona Barberio, Marketing Manager, Leibinger

From 2030 onwards, products in the EU are expected to carry a digital identity: the “Digital Product Passport” (DPP) will become mandatory for many industries. This new level of transparency is made possible by the global adoption of GS1 2D codes. In Europe, sustainability and the circular economy are thus increasingly becoming a legal requirement, no longer merely voluntary goals.

Under the EU Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) — enacted by the European Parliament and the Council of the EU (following a proposal by the European Commission) — manufacturers will, in the near future, be required to provide detailed, standardized product data in digital form for certain product groups. The regulation aims to make all products on the EU market more durable, repairable, resource-efficient, and traceable throughout their lifecycle.

Introducing the DPP

At the heart of this new framework lies the Digital Product Passport (DPP). Its goal: to create transparency by documenting essential information about a product’s composition, origin, repairability, and environmental footprint. The DPP will make it easier for authorities, businesses, and consumers to understand how sustainable a product really is — and to make better choices based on that knowledge.

Implementation roadmap

The rollout starts with prioritized product groups that are highly relevant for the environment and the circular economy — such as steel/aluminum, textiles, furniture, tyres and mattresses (Work Plan 2025–2030). In parallel, the Work Plan includes horizontal measures, including requirements in the context of electrical and electronic equipment (e.g., on recyclability). Independently of this, the Battery Passport will already apply to batteries from February 18, 2027.

Step by step, more and more product groups in the EU will thus receive a digital identity that is accessible throughout the entire lifecycle — from production to recycling.

Why GS1 2D codes matter

To make this vision work, each product needs a globally unique identifier and a standards-based way to connect it to digital information. That’s where 2D barcodes powered by GS1 come in. Whether printed as a GS1 DataMatrix or a QR Code powered by GS1 (using GS1 Digital Link), these symbols can link physical products to their digital twins, storing or connecting to verified data about materials, origin, and reuse.

In this new landscape, the once-humble barcode evolves into the language of the circular economy. And the GS1 2D code becomes its universal translator.

Smart packaging and new business models

As packaging goes digital, new opportunities emerge. Products equipped with 2D codes can “communicate” with machines, sensors, and applications. Manufacturers gain real-time insights into sales, returns, or recycling rates.

For consumers, transparency becomes tangible. A quick scan reveals CO₂ footprint, sourcing, or end-of-life instructions. Brands can use this data to strengthen trust and loyalty while complying with sustainability regulations.

What sounds futuristic today — a bottle that reports when it’s recycled — could soon be a daily reality.

For packaging producers, the shift toward 2D-driven smart packaging is both a challenge and an opportunity. Those who start now will shape future industry standards. At the same time, print quality becomes more critical than ever: smaller, denser codes with variable data demand precision, stability, and flexibility.

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