Arianee (France) provides blockchain-based product identity and ownership, with strong adoption in luxury. Its DPP is anchored to a token on a proprietary chain. Reeco takes a standards-first route: verifiable credentials that plug into the EU wallet and registry without requiring a blockchain.
| Reeco | Arianee | |
|---|---|---|
| Core model | Verifies declarations against primary sources at issuance | Blockchain product identity & ownership |
| Granularity | Per-garment, with mass balance | Per-item token |
| Credential delivery | Wallet-ready SD-JWT VC via OID4VCI (public issuer) | Tokenized (proprietary chain) |
| Public testable endpoint | Yes — ia.reeco.eco/dpp-issuer/ + public JWKS | Not published |
| Standards recognition | UNTP Software Register, JRC Stakeholder, CIRPASS-2 EWG1/3/5 | Blockchain ecosystem, luxury focus |
Arianee's strength is tokenized ownership and brand engagement in luxury. Reeco's is regulatory-grade verification: declarations checked against primary sources, per-garment mass balance, and an SD-JWT credential via OID4VCI that any verifier validates against a public key — no chain, no token, no vendor dependency. For ESPR audit and customs, that interoperability is the point.
Reeco issues the DPP as an SD-JWT Verifiable Credential via OID4VCI, signed (ES256/EdDSA) and selectively disclosable — testable today at ia.reeco.eco/dpp-issuer/ with a public JWKS. It is listed in the UNTP Software Register (UN/CEFACT) and built by a JRC Registered Stakeholder and CIRPASS-2 Expert Member. Verifiable facts, not positioning.
See the full guide to DPP providers for Italian fashion and the ESPR compliance guide.
Arianee anchors product identity to a blockchain token, strong for luxury ownership and engagement. Reeco issues standards-based verifiable credentials (OID4VCI/SD-JWT) focused on verification at source and ESPR audit-readiness, interoperable with the EU wallet without a blockchain.
No blockchain is required. Reeco uses W3C-aligned verifiable credentials signed with public keys, independently verifiable and interoperable with the EU Digital Identity Wallet.
For tokenized ownership experiences, Arianee. For audit-ready, verifiable, per-garment DPPs that hold up to customs and green-claims scrutiny, Reeco.
No. GRS verifies recycled content in bulk kilograms; the ESPR Digital Product Passport requires a verifiable declaration for each individual garment. GRS is a strong input to compliance, not compliance itself.
The ESPR delegated act for textiles is expected in 2027, with enforcement of the Digital Product Passport from 2028 for garments sold in the EU.
A GRS Transaction Certificate proves a quantity of recycled material (in kilograms) moved between two certified parties over a period. A DPP claim is the recycled-content statement attached to one specific finished product that a consumer or auditor can verify.
Through a mass-balance method that allocates certified material across produced units using fabric construction and yield data, then verifies and signs each claim. This is what the Reeco® platform automates.