About
MonXolo is a UK-based research-driven initiative building compliance infrastructure for the next generation of sustainable products and materials in Europe.
We focus on transforming European sustainability and circularity regulations into operational, verifiable, and auditable digital systems, with a strong emphasis on Digital Product Passports (DPP), lifecycle evidence, and regulatory interoperability.
MonXolo’s work sits at the intersection of:
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sustainability-by-design and lifecycle performance,
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regulatory compliance (ESPR, PPWR, CIRPASS, GS1 alignment),
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digital traceability and evidence integrity across complex supply chains.
Rather than acting as a consumer-facing platform, MonXolo provides invisible compliance infrastructure that enables designers, manufacturers, brands, and public actors to demonstrate real-world sustainability performance beyond declarations or labels.
Within the New European Bauhaus context, MonXolo is interested in collaborations that connect:
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material innovation and circular design,
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real-world end-of-life validation,
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policy-aligned digital governance and evidence frameworks.
We are particularly keen to engage in consortium-building activities for future Horizon Europe and NEB calls, contributing as an infrastructure and compliance backbone partner, supporting projects that aim to make sustainability measurable, trustworthy, and scalable across borders.
Circular and regenerative approaches for the built environment
NEB-2026-01-REGEN-01: Sustainable, inclusive, affordable and beautiful solutions for thermal comfort in buildingsNEB-2026-01-REGEN-02: Advancing sustainable maintenance and repair measures for existing buildingsNEB-2026-01-REGEN-03: Innovative solutions for the sustainable and beautiful use of vertical space
Innovative funding and new business models for the transformation of neighbourhoods
NEB-2026-01-BUSINESS-02: Understanding capital market dynamics for increased investment in NEB projects in neighbourhoodsNEB-2026-01-BUSINESS-03: Approaches to reuse vacant, obsolete or underutilised spaces