Giulia Pantoni
An Analysis of Critical Success Factors and Barriers to the Implementation of the Digital Product Passport in the Textile Supply Chain: The MagnoLab Case Study.
Rel. Andrea Tuni. Politecnico di Torino, Corso di laurea magistrale in Ingegneria Gestionale (Engineering And Management), 2025
|
|
PDF (Tesi_di_laurea)
- Tesi
Accesso limitato a: Solo utenti staff fino al 21 Luglio 2028 (data di embargo). Licenza: Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives. Download (3MB) |
Abstract
The textile industry has always been a major source of environmental and social impacts, considering greenhouse gas emissions, water pollution, massive waste production and labor exploitation. All this has prompted European regulators to introduce new and more stringent regulations with the aim of promoting sustainability and circularity, encouraging a transition towards increasingly green production models. Among the tools emerging in this scenario, the Digital Product Passport (DPP) aims to improve traceability and information management throughout the product life cycle. Through the integration of accessible and verifiable digital data, DPP fosters transparency in the supply chain, recycling and reuse of materials, improves regulatory compliance and gets consumers and companies more involved in the green transition.
However, its implementation in the textile sector presents numerous technical, economic and organizational challenges and critical issues
Relatori
Anno Accademico
Tipo di pubblicazione
Numero di pagine
Corso di laurea
Classe di laurea
Aziende collaboratrici
URI
![]() |
Modifica (riservato agli operatori) |
