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  5. Textiles in the digital age: navigating the integration of the digital product pass within the Fab City framework
 
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Textiles in the digital age: navigating the integration of the digital product pass within the Fab City framework

Publication date
2024-12-20
Document type
Sammelbandbeitrag oder Buchkapitel
Author
Prien, Sarah
Organisational unit
DTEC.bw 
DOI
10.24405/16780
URI
https://openhsu.ub.hsu-hh.de/handle/10.24405/16780
ISBN
978-3-86818-329-0
Project
Dezentrale digitale Produktion für die urbane Wertschöpfung (FCDW) 
Book title
dtec.bw-Beiträge der Helmut-Schmidt-Universität / Universität der Bundeswehr Hamburg : Forschungsaktivitäten im Zentrum für Digitalisierungs- und Technologieforschung der Bundeswehr dtec.bw : Band 2 – 2024
First page
70
Last page
74
Is part of
https://openhsu.ub.hsu-hh.de/handle/10.24405/16768
Peer-reviewed
✅
Part of the university bibliography
✅
Files
 openHSU_16780.pdf (758.41 KB)
  • Additional Information
Keyword
dtec.bw
Cosmo-localism
Commons-based future
Digitalisation
Digital product pass
Textile industry
Abstract
This paper critically explores the challenges surrounding the implementation of the Digital Product Pass (DPP) within the context of a Fab City model, focusing on the textile industry exemplified by the use case Fab City Hamburg. The DPP, initiated by the European Union as part of its Circular Economy Action Plan, aims to enhance product traceability and promote sustainable consumption by providing detailed information about a product's lifecycle. However, its adoption in a Fab City setting, characterized by local production, community-based practices, and a focus on reducing consumption, encounters several obstacles. Financial constraints, particularly affecting small and medium-sized enterprises, pose a significant barrier to DPP implementation. Standardization of data models is another critical issue, given the diversity of products and manufacturing processes in Fab Cities. Ensuring transparency and accessibility of product information, influencing consumer behaviour towards sustainability, and addressing the scalability of upcycling processes are also major challenges. Critics argue that the DPP's emphasis on recycling may undermine efforts to prevent waste generation and that it lacks focus on systemic changes needed for genuine sustainability. The potential for greenwashing and the need for a user-friendly solution that accommodates the unique characteristics of Fab City production are also highlighted. This exploration underscores the complexities of integrating digital technologies with sustainability goals in a Fab City model, emphasizing the need for supportive policies and innovative approaches to overcome these challenges.
Version
Published version
Access right on openHSU
Open access

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