Challenges and Solutions to EU Battery Passport Regulation Compliance for Asian Economic Operators Regulatory, Architectural, and Cybersecurity Requirements for Digital Battery Passport Implementation
- Delivery
- Available on this site
- Format
- Price
- Non-members (tax incl.):¥1,100 Members (tax incl.):¥880
- Publication code
- 20265197
- Paper/Info type
- Proceedings (Spring)
No.47-26
- Pages
- 1-8(Total 8 p)
- Date of publication
- May 2026
- Publisher
- JSAE
- Language
- English
- Event
- 2026 JSAE Annual Congress (Spring)
Detailed Information
| Author(J) | 1) Subhajeet Rath, 2) Sjoerd Rongen, 3) Avedis Dadikozyan, 4) Erik Hoedemaekers, 5) Steven Wilkins |
|---|---|
| Author(E) | 1) Subhajeet Rath, 2) Sjoerd Rongen, 3) Avedis Dadikozyan, 4) Erik Hoedemaekers, 5) Steven Wilkins |
| Affiliation(J) | 1) TNO, 2) TNO, 3) TNO, 4) TNO, 5) TNO/Eindhoven University of Technology |
| Affiliation(E) | 1) TNO, 2) TNO, 3) TNO, 4) TNO, 5) TNO/Eindhoven University of Technology |
| Abstract(E) | This paper examines the practical and technical challenges Asian economic operators face in complying with the EU Battery Passport regulations. It analyzes high-level regulatory implications and outlines optimal IT/IoT architectures for capturing and managing battery lifecycle data. Key concerns such as data access, interoperability, cybersecurity and dynamic synchronization between the Battery Management System (BMS) and cloud platforms are addressed. Based on findings from pilot demonstrations, the paper provides recommendations for collaborative solutions within the battery ecosystem to ensure a scalable, regulation-compliant implementation of battery passports. |