SellSafely

Sector · Iron and Steel

DPP + CBAM compliance from your Mill Test Certificates.

Upload your MTCs (EN 10204) and SellSafely extracts heat numbers, chemical composition, mechanical properties, and carbon footprint data — generating ESPR-compliant passports that align with CBAM reporting.

Steel is the earliest DPP deadline. Start now.

The steel DPP timeline

2026

Delegated act expected

The European Commission is expected to publish the iron and steel delegated act under ESPR, defining the required DPP data points.

October 2027

Compliance deadline

Iron and steel products placed on the EU market are expected to require a Digital Product Passport from approximately October 2027 — the earliest deadline of any product category.

Now

Earliest deadline of all categories

Steel has the shortest runway. Manufacturers and importers need to start collecting and structuring MTC data immediately.

What we extract from MTCs

Heat number and steel grade (EN, ASTM, JIS designations)

Chemical composition — C, Si, Mn, P, S, Cr, Ni, Mo, Cu, V, and alloying elements

Mechanical properties — yield strength, tensile strength, elongation, hardness, impact values

Country of origin, manufacturing mill, melt and pour location

Dimensional data, surface condition, heat treatment, inspection results

Embedded carbon footprint data when available — directly reusable for CBAM

CBAM integration

One ingestion. Two regulations covered.

The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) and ESPR Digital Product Passports overlap heavily for iron and steel. Heat numbers, country of origin, embedded emissions, and supplier identifiers all appear in both reports.

SellSafely captures this data once from your MTCs and supplier emissions declarations, then makes it available for both your DPP records and your CBAM quarterly reports.

Pain points we solve

MTCs are unstructured PDFs

Mill Test Certificates arrive as PDFs in a hundred different layouts. There's no standardized digital exchange format — every mill and trader does it differently.

No standardized digital exchange

EN 10204 specifies what should be on a certificate, but not how to share it digitally. Teams resort to manually keying values into spreadsheets and ERPs.

Every customer asks for a different format

Construction buyers, automotive OEMs, and CBAM declarants all want the same underlying data presented differently. Repeated rework is the norm.

Get ahead of the steel DPP deadline.

Bring a handful of MTCs and we'll show you extraction, evidence-linking, and CBAM-aligned outputs on your real data.