Among the first key results of this project, supportive regulatory and standardization frameworks are crucial. The RemaNet project aligns well with European sustainability and data-sharing requirements, particularly regarding CEN/CLC/JTC 24, created in response to the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) under the European Green Deal.
Additionally, RemaNet is pivotal in reliable and efficient data sharing. It supports the Digital Product Passport (DPP), ensuring stakeholders—manufacturers, distributors, consumers, and recyclers—access traceable product information, promoting informed consumer choices, resource management, and sustainability practices.
Beyond the state of the art, an analysis of the platform’s requirements provided valuable insights. In-depth use-case exploration identified challenges in proving remanufacturing solution viability. Additional challenges were outlined to guide the development and validation of strategic platform services to ensure further exploitation.
Technically, key results include developing a solid platform infrastructure. A service-oriented architecture has been deemed essential, with APIs for microservices being defined, dataspaces structured, and data interoperability prioritized.
For user interaction, preliminary work defined different platform user types and interactions. Strategic tools were identified to formalize the platform’s structured and unstructured data sources, ensuring growth beyond the project’s duration.
Since some RemaNet services/tools require using sensitive know-how or sharing restricted data among specific partners, data management based on an IDS-compliant framework must prioritize information ownership. This applies to distributed federated remanufacturing actors and technology providers involved.