3 Big Takeaways from AIPIA World Congress 2022

3 Big Takeaways from AIPIA World Congress 2022

A couple of weeks ago we had the chance to attend the Active & Intelligent Packaging World Congress - AIPIA 2022 . This year AIPIA joined forces with Packaging Europe’s Innovation Horizon summit .?

I have followed this event closely for many years. AIPIA World Congress brings together the innovators transforming the world of consumers goods packaging. The 2022 edition confirmed this with two packed days of learning and connecting with leaders in the field. Following are my three biggest takeaways from this year’s event.

1 – When product digital identities become the expectation

I have been in the business of providing digital identities for consumer products for close to 15 years now. Convincing CPG (Consumer Packaged Goods) brands and packaging manufacturers that they need an ‘on-pack’ digital strategy hasn’t always been straightforward or easy – until now. Not only are brands open to discussing product digitization, but brands are on the conference agenda leading the discussion!

In large part, interest and mass-scale adoption of product digitization strategies result from consumer trends like the need for digital information to be accessible in a frictionless manner. Also, the growing understanding of how to use digital triggers such as QR codes among brands and consumers. And more importantly, the demand for transparency into the composition and sustainability of products and packaging from both consumers and a regulatory standpoint.

Industry-wide Initiatives such as Sunrise 2027 , the agreed upon date to make the transition to accepting 2D barcodes at point-of-sale, was discussed and progress was presented by several stakeholders. This step change in maturity also means that the time is right to think about data formats and interoperability. Several discussions focused on making sure that the digital identities and digital twins of consumer products can be used for a range of use cases over time as opposed to single campaigns.

Standards were a hot topic. I was pleased to see some of the initiatives my company helped build talked about as the baseline for needed change in the consumer goods industry. For example, the GS1 Digital Link standard is positioned as the de-facto standard for future-proofing product identities. Also, the more recent EPCIS 2.0 standard was referenced throughout the conference in conjunction with supply chain traceability and transparency use cases.

No alt text provided for this image
Standards such as the GS1 Digital Link or EPCIS 2.0 were at the heart of several discussions.

2 – Upcoming regulations are boosting the need for digital product identities

The momentum around digital product identities is also accelerated by upcoming regulatory frameworks. One such framework is the EU Digital Product Passport (DPP): a set of upcoming regulatory requirements enforcing many consumer products sold in the EU to feature a unique and accessible digital identity to help consumers make greener choices. AIPIA was not short of discussions around the EU DPP and about how the DPP is a real opportunity for brands to shine with their consumers versus a set of legal constraints only. Indeed, thanks to unique and consumer accessible product identities on pack, brands will have unprecedented ways of connecting directly with their customers.

It is expected that DPPs will be mandatory for selected product categories by 2024. While all legislation and the underlying principles aren’t yet set in stone, there are some details I can confirm. For instance, product data will need to be structured and accessed through a unique identifier. Rather than being only hosted centrally by the EU commission, the data will be decentralized and linked with the European Dataspace for Smart Circular Applications (EDSCA). Note that decentralized does not necessarily mean blockchain; it simply means, the data is not stored in a single centralized repository. Blockchain could be part of the blueprint, as illustrated by our recent Digimarc Labs project with IOTA but blockchain will unlikely be an absolute requirement for all DPPs.

Standards are also likely to be at the heart of the DPP implementations. GS1 presented their views with an architecture combining 2D codes (e.g., QR codes) using the GS1 Digital Link format as well as product traceability data stored using the EPCIS 2.0 format .

No alt text provided for this image
The Digital Product Passport will be the license to the EU market.

3 – Product Labels 2.0 – From Functional Inks to Printed Electronics

AIPIA is always a great place to get a glimpse of what the (near) future of product labels will look like. Several innovations were presented. Starting with Wiliot and their IoT Pixels: tags the size and thickness of a postage stamp capable of communicating via Bluetooth Low Energy. IoT Pixels are low-cost (between .10-.75 cents), battery-free, embedded sensors that sense temperature and location today, and shortly will sense occupancy, proximity, and humidity. Wiliot’s IoT Pixels are battery-free because they are powered by harvesting radio waves.

We were the first platform to integrate with Wiliot back in 2020. I was impressed to see the progress made by Wiliot over the past two years. IoT Pixels have clearly gained in stability and usability.

I introduced my blog stating that product digitization has come of age and that we are seeing the mass scale adoption of digital identities by consumer product brands. Wiliot pushes the boundaries of innovation even further, painting a picture of a ‘not too distant future’ when all products will have sensing capabilities.

For example, one of our recent Digimarc Labs proof-of-concept showed that IoT Pixels can be combined with the Digimarc Illuminate platform to enhance the digital identity of vaccines with temperature sensing capabilities. This allows scanning a watermark or QR code on the vaccine vial to get an accurate report of the temperatures the vaccine has been exposed to throughout its lifecycle.

No alt text provided for this image
Architecture of the energy-harvesting Wiliot IoT Pixel. - source: wiliot.com

Wiliot was not the only sensing innovation present at AIPIA. Several other low-cost sensing technologies were showcased. Picking just a few examples, VTT presented NFC smart labels with sensing and energy harvesting capabilities based on biomaterials. This research is important because as labels get smarter, they become harder to recycle creating a negative impact on sustainability goals.

No alt text provided for this image
Some of the innovative smart and sustainable tags VTT is working on.Votre adresse mail est déjà enregistrée. Merci de nous contacter par téléphone (+41 31 311 33 03) ou par courriel ([email protected]) pour que nous puissions vous inscrire comme membre ou vous aider dans votre requête.

MyCol.si introduced functional inks capable of sensing temperatures in both a reversible and irreversible way. This allows printing labels that sense the current temperature but also record when the temperature passes a certain lower or upper threshold. This type of technology could improve and lower the cost of temperature monitoring for fresh produce and other consumer goods.

No alt text provided for this image
The MyCol.si reversible and irreversible thermochromic indicator based on novel functional ink - source: mycol.si

In summary, the 2022 edition of AIPIA was exciting – highlighting innovation and proof-of-concept for digitizing the world’s consumer products. The event confirmed the acceleration of product digitization largely led by consumers demanding greater sustainability and transparency into the products they purchase, wear and consume. Consumers are making purchasing decisions that align with their interests in their health and the environment.

As shared, upcoming regulations such as the EU DPP will support these consumer demands with industry wide initiatives. While industry innovators are bringing fine-grained sensing capabilities to billions of consumer products accelerating a mass-scale Internet of Things.

Thank you for sharing Dominique Guinard!

回复

It is exciting to see the industry catching up with innovation. Thank you for sharing these highlights Dominique Guinard

回复
Fabienne Le Tadic

Chief of Strategy @ Valmont Cosmetics | Customer & talent centricity | Change management | Digital Transformation

1 年

Great sharing Dominique Guinard and still a long way to go to leverage QR codes on pack. . Encouraging … though I recently came across a new régulation in EU with regards to recycling and I am appallee at the lack of Integration of such technologies to manage this new info on pack leading brand owners to print extra labels, making supply chains more complex … a great moment of incompetence coming straight off civil servants not fully aware of the impact they have on industry … and limiting value add for the consumer. May be QR codes and digital identities should make their way where regulators are …

Bruno Poggi

Work with Founders and Entrepreneurs in the SME segment | M&A Advisor, Banker | CCO, CRO and Sales Leader | Financial Services & Technology | Value Creation | Growth

1 年

Thanks for sharing Dominique. Started my young career with crown cork & seal (now crown holdings), there are so many solid use cases to implement in packaging for end-to-end tracking, tracing and quality assurance in that space, agree WillIoT is a terrific tech that addresses part of the economics of such implementation.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Dominique Guinard的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了