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RBA Launches Responsible Business Transparency Protocol to Advance Supply Chain Traceability



11/06/2025


RBA Launches Responsible Business Transparency Protocol to Advance Supply Chain Traceability
The Responsible Business Alliance (RBA) has announced the active rollout of its Responsible Business Transparency Protocol (RBTP) — a new data exchange framework built on the United Nations Transparency Protocol (UNTP) and the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) standards for verifiable credentials.

As global supply chains grow increasingly intricate and regulations evolve, both governments and consumers are demanding clearer evidence to verify claims such as product origin, sustainability practices, and due diligence. To meet these demands, the RBTP serves as an industry-focused extension of the UNTP, designed to enable the secure, verifiable, and interoperable exchange of supply chain data across the automotive, electronics, and related industries. It provides the foundation for multi-tier traceability across complex networks.

Rather than depending on spreadsheets, PDFs, or isolated platforms to share compliance or sustainability information, organizations can now issue digital credentials. These credentials—accessible through a barcode, QR code, or hyperlink—can be verified, transferred, and reused by others, either manually or through existing systems and tools.

The RBA has recently initiated a collaborative pilot program for the RBTP, involving a diverse group of participants to test its effectiveness in addressing data-sharing challenges, managing complex datasets, and ensuring compatibility with various audit standards in mineral supply chains. The goal of the pilot is to validate the RBTP’s functionality and identify the tools and engagement strategies necessary for large-scale implementation.

This pilot focuses on critical minerals—copper, cobalt, lithium, and tantalum—which are essential to modern technologies such as electric vehicle batteries and smartphones. Over 20 entities are participating, including upstream producers, downstream buyers, standards organizations, and a government agency. The initiative seeks to prove that a traceability-oriented, auditable, and interoperable protocol can perform effectively in real-world conditions. With its global membership base across the electronics, automotive, and retail sectors, and supply partners operating worldwide, the RBA is well positioned to test and refine the infrastructure needed for transparent communication between suppliers and buyers.

“The Responsible Business Transparency Protocol is built on UN standards, with technical specifications clearly defined to encourage wide adoption by governments and industries globally,” said Tyler Gillard, Chief Strategy Officer of the RBA. “It’s adaptable to local regulations, uses open-source technology, and integrates with existing systems—while allowing data owners full control over what information is shared.”

Pyx Global, a UNTP acceleration partner, is assisting the RBA in coordinating the pilot. Beyond developing the technical foundation, Pyx is helping align the RBTP with UNTP standards and tailor it to specific sectoral requirements.

The pilot will test various scenarios, including incomplete data handling, connecting chain-of-custody claims across tiers, managing diverse data-sharing preferences and security needs, and verifying due-diligence certifications across platforms. It aims to generate measurable insights on implementation costs, scalability, and flexibility of the RBTP, as well as demonstrate how sustainability and traceability claims can be trusted, reused, and transferred across systems.

The UN Transparency Protocol (UNTP) itself establishes interoperability standards that enable different technology platforms to operate within sustainable and connected global value chains. It defines a streamlined architecture covering standards for product, facility, traceability, conformity, and identity data.

Click here to know more about the UNTP.