-
CK Hutchison begins arbitration against Panama over annulled canal contract
-
UNESCO recognition inspires hope in Afghan artist's city
-
Ukraine, Russia, US negotiators gather in Abu Dhabi for war talks
-
WTO must 'reform or die': talks facilitator
-
Doctors hope UK archive can solve under-50s bowel cancer mystery
-
Stocks swing following latest AI-fuelled sell-off on Wall St
-
Demanding Dupont set to fire France in Ireland opener
-
Britain's ex-prince Andrew leaves Windsor home: BBC
-
Coach plots first South Africa World Cup win after Test triumph
-
Spin-heavy Pakistan hit form, but India boycott risks early T20 exit
-
Japan eyes Premier League parity by aligning calendar with Europe
-
Whack-a-mole: US academic fights to purge his AI deepfakes
-
Love in a time of war for journalist and activist in new documentary
-
'Unprecedented mass killing': NGOs battle to quantify Iran crackdown scale
-
Seahawks kid Cooper Kupp seeks new Super Bowl memories
-
Thousands of Venezuelans march to demand Maduro's release
-
AI, manipulated images falsely link some US politicians with Epstein
-
Move on, says Trump as Epstein files trigger probe into British politician
-
Arteta backs Arsenal to build on 'magical' place in League Cup final
-
Evil Empire to underdogs: Patriots eye 7th Super Bowl
-
UBS grilled on Capitol Hill over Nazi-era probe
-
Guardiola 'hurt' by suffering caused in global conflicts
-
Marseille do their work early to beat Rennes in French Cup
-
Colombia's Petro, Trump hail talks after bitter rift
-
Trump signs spending bill ending US government shutdown
-
Arsenal sink Chelsea to reach League Cup final
-
Leverkusen sink St Pauli to book spot in German Cup semis
-
'We just need something positive' - Monks' peace walk across US draws large crowds
-
Milan close gap on Inter with 3-0 win over Bologna
-
No US immigration agents at Super Bowl: security chief
-
NASA Moon mission launch delayed to March after test
-
'You are great': Trump makes up with Colombia's Petro in fireworks-free meeting
-
Spain to seek social media ban for under-16s
-
X hits back after France summons Musk, raids offices in deepfake probe
-
LIV Golf events to receive world ranking points: official
-
Russia resumes large-scale Ukraine strikes in glacial weather
-
US House passes spending bill ending government shutdown
-
US jet downs Iran drone but talks still on course
-
UK police launching criminal probe into ex-envoy Mandelson
-
US-Iran talks 'still scheduled' after drone shot down: White House
-
Chomsky sympathized with Epstein over 'horrible' press treatment
-
French prosecutors stick to demand for five-year ban for Le Pen
-
Russia's economic growth slowed to 1% in 2025: Putin
-
Bethell spins England to 3-0 sweep over Sri Lanka in World Cup warm-up
-
Nagelsmann backs Ter Stegen for World Cup despite 'cruel' injury
-
Homage or propaganda? Carnival parade stars Brazil's Lula
-
EU must be 'less naive' in COP climate talks: French ministry
-
Colombia's Petro meets Trump after months of tensions
-
Air India inspects Boeing 787 fuel switches after grounding
-
US envoy evokes transition to 'democratic' Venezuela
SMX Builds the World's First Reality-Based Sustainability System Where Materials Tell the Truth
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 14, 2025 / For decades, sustainability lived in the realm of aspiration. Ambitious global gatherings promised breakthroughs, governments drafted sweeping resolutions, and industries delivered polished reports declaring progress. Yet, beneath the speeches and statistics, a structural flaw persisted: none of these systems could verify themselves. Targets depended on trust. Compliance depended on declarations. Safety depended on assumptions.
It was a world built on optimism rather than evidence, and eventually the gap became impossible to ignore. When commitments outpaced the ability to confirm them, global sustainability stalled-not for lack of will, but for lack of tools.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is rebuilding the foundation. Instead of asking the world to trust claims, it gives materials the ability to prove themselves. Its molecular-level identity technology transforms plastics, composites, and flame-retardant products into verifiable data sources, allowing policies to function not as promises, but as measurable realities. In this model, sustainability stops being a narrative. It becomes a system that cannot lie.
The End of Assumptions, the Rise of Evidence
The reason sustainability faltered was not ignorance; it was invisibility. Regulators couldn't see inside materials. Manufacturers couldn't verify recycled content beyond paperwork. Safety authorities couldn't confirm whether flame retardants were present or effective until after failures occurred.
SMX removes that blindness by embedding an invisible chemical signature directly into products at the molecular level. This identity survives processing, melting, shredding, and recycling. A quick scan reveals composition, origin, and compliance with a level of precision that renders old reporting models obsolete.
It is not oversight. It is an embedded truth. And it allows regulations to stop relying on self-policing, because materials can now carry their own evidence.
Where Reality Replaces Reporting
Singapore offers the clearest example of this shift. Working with A*STAR, SMX is building a plastics passport that links every item to a verified record of its own lifecycle. This system doesn't ask companies what they recycled. It shows them. It shows regulators. It shows auditors. It shows the market.
In Europe, SMX's planned collaboration with REDWAVE takes this one step further by integrating verification into production itself. The conveyor line becomes an enforcement mechanism. Each unit of material is validated in real time, creating a live reflection of compliance rather than a quarterly or annual claim.
And in North America, SMX's work with the North American Flame Retardant Alliance introduces a safety framework rooted in measurable chemistry instead of paperwork. Regulators can finally confirm compliance inside the product, not after an incident. This turns safety into a proactive discipline rather than a forensic one.
The First System Where Materials Themselves Are the Source of Truth
With SMX's technology embedded directly into products, enforcement is no longer adversarial. It becomes automatic. Manufacturers gain clarity rather than fear. Regulators move from policing to monitoring. Insurers get quantifiable risk instead of actuarial speculation. Consumers receive goods backed by data instead of marketing language.
In this system, sustainability is not an opinion. It is a reading. Safety is not a claim. It is a measurable property. Recycling is not a pledge. It is a trail of evidence.
Global promises failed because the world lacked visibility. SMX is rebuilding the sustainability framework with reality baked in, molecule by molecule. It is turning the physical world into a trustworthy one-not through speeches, but through chemistry.
The shift is already underway. And the future of sustainability will not be written on paper. It will be written inside the materials themselves.
About SMX
As global businesses face new and complex challenges relating to carbon neutrality and meeting new governmental and regional regulations and standards, SMX is able to offer players along the value chain access to its marking, tracking, measuring and digital platform technology to transition more successfully to a low-carbon economy.
Forward-Looking Statements
This information contains forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. These statements involve risks, uncertainties, and assumptions about future events related to SMX (NASDAQ:SMX), its molecular marking technologies, and their potential adoption across regulatory, industrial, and commercial environments.
Forward looking statements in this editorial include, without limitation, expectations regarding the scalability, performance, and market acceptance of SMX's molecular identification systems; anticipated outcomes of its collaborations with A*STAR in Singapore, REDWAVE in Europe, and the North American Flame Retardant Alliance; the potential for SMX technology to enhance or replace existing verification, recycling, or safety frameworks; and assumptions about regulatory trends, sustainability mandates, industrial traceability standards, and demand for material-level authentication in global supply chains.
These statements are based on current assumptions and projections, which are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties, including changes in regulatory requirements, geopolitical conditions, supply-chain volatility, competitive technologies, partner implementation risks, operational challenges, and factors outlined in SMX's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K and subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q.
Readers are cautioned that actual results may differ materially from those indicated in forward looking statements. These statements speak only as of the date of publication. SMX undertakes no obligation to update or revise forward looking statements to reflect future events or new information, except as required by law.
EMAIL: [email protected]
SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
E.Flores--AT