Go from 0 to DPP-Ready
CarbonSync helps design and compliance teams prepare for ESPR and
generate DPP's in a single workspace.
Centralize Product Impact Data
Consolidate materials, emissions and supplier data in a single workspace.
AI-Guided Material Optimization
Our AI recommends low-carbon materials that match your performance and cost targets.
Automated Digital Product Passports
Generate complete DPP's with verified data - ready to share with retailers and regulators.
Continuous Compliance Monitoring
Our AI agents monitors data completeness and documentation status, so you're always audit-ready.
Are you DPP-Ready?
Take our free assessment
You’ll need a DPP if you sell products in the EU, regardless of origin.
Applies to:
✅ Manufacturers
✅ Importers
✅ Retailers
ESPR extends to components and intermediate products, along with finished products.
Key Facts
Effective: Rollout to start in late 2026 for priority products
Applies to: Nearly all consumer and industrial products sold in the EU
Focus: Durability, traceability, repairability
Output: A Digital Product Passport (DPP)
Risk: Fines of up to 6% of annual revenues
Everything you need to know about ESPR
What is ESPR anyway? ESPR stands for the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation. It's a new European Union law that aims to make products sold in the EU more environmentally friendly. The goal: To make products more durable, repairable, and recyclable, while improving transparency across the supply chain.
What does ESPR mean for me? ESPR requires that most products placed on the EU market must have a Digital Product Passport (DPP). The rollout of DPP requirements under ESPR begins around 2026 with phased implementation for specific product groups.
What happens if we don't follow all the DPP requirements? What is the liability? Companies can face fines up to 6% of annual revenues, and risk getting permanently delisted from EU markets for placing products without a DPP or products that don't have all the information required. Making false or vague green claims can lead to fines of 4-6% of annual turnover.
How do I prepare for ESPR? Companies and organizations involved in manufacturing, distributing, or selling manufactured products covered by the ESPR should prepare for the ESPR pilot. This means, if you sell products in the EU, even if your business is based outside the EU, you should prepare for the Digital Product Passport (DPP). These requirements apply to all products sold in the EU market, regardless of where they are made.
How soon should I get started? We recommend getting started as early as possible by signing up for ESPR pilots. Phased DPP implementation begins from 2026 with broad uptake required by 2027-2030 across many product groups. Preparing for the Digital Product Passport (DPP) can take from around 12 months depending on your product category - acting early reduces risk and helps ensure smoother compliance
Why should I sign up for CarbonSync's ESPP pilot? The digital product passport requires aggregating hundreds of data points across the entire supply chain of a company. For most companies this information currently lives across disaggregated tools, and point solutions, making the collection and validation the biggest hurdle. CarbonSync automates all of the data busywork by offering a single workspace that can be used as a one- stop shop solution. We take you from ground zero to generating digital product passports all in the same platform - significantly faster. We also run compliance checks on your products, to ensure that every SKU is compliant with the design requirements mandated by ESPR.