AGENDA
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Review of the EU Battery Passport regulation and timeline
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Obligations of the value chain participants
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The importance traceability data and interoperability
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Case Study
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Q&A Session
The European Union’s upcoming Digital Product Passport (DPP), as identified in the EU Battery Regulation, requires Economic Operators to emit a digital battery passport (DBP) which includes information about battery components and raw materials. The DBP must also contain information on battery lifecycles—from the raw materials through processing, manufacturing, primary use, 2nd life, recycling, remanufacturing, and disposal. The DBP will have substantial implications for global value chains. Investing in the right traceability technologies is key to creating a battery passport which contains information that is accurate and conforms with mandatory regulatory obligations.