Maersk and IBM Unveil First Industry-Wide Cross-Border Supply Chain Solution on Blockchain

Category:
Acquisition or Partnership

IBM and Maersk announced a new collaboration to use blockchain technology to help transform the global, cross-border supply chain.

The blockchain solution based on the Hyperledger Fabric and built by IBM and Maersk, a global leader in transport and logistics, will be made available to the shipping and logistics industry.  The solution will help manage and track the paper trail of tens of millions of shipping containers across the world by digitizing the supply chain process from end-to-end to enhance transparency and the highly secure sharing of information among trading partners.  When adopted at scale, the solution has the potential to save the industry billions of dollars.

Ninety percent of goods in global trade are carried by the ocean shipping industry each year.  IBM and Maersk intend to work with a network of shippers, freight forwarders, ocean carriers, ports, and customs authorities to build the new global trade digitization solution, which is expected to go into production later this year.  It has the potential to vastly reduce the cost and complexity of trading by using blockchain technology to establish transparency among parties.  The solution is designed to help reduce fraud and errors, reduce the time products spend in the transit and shipping process, improve inventory management, and ultimately reduce waste and cost.  Maersk found in 2014 that just a simple shipment of refrigerated goods from East Africa to Europe can go through nearly 30 people and organizations, including more than 200 different interactions and communications among them.

In order to prove the potential value of a commercial trade digitization solution, IBM and Maersk have worked with a number of trading partners, government authorities, and logistics companies.  For example, goods from Schneider Electric were transported on a Maersk Line container vessel from the Port of Rotterdam to the Port of Newark in a pilot with the Customs Administration of the Netherlands under an EU research project.  The U.S. Department of Homeland Security Science and Technology Directorate, and U.S. Customs and Border Protection are also participating in this pilot.  Damco, Maersk’s supply chain solutions company, supported origin management activities of the shipment while utilizing the solution.  The international shipment of flowers to Royal FloraHolland from Kenya, Mandarin oranges from California, and pineapples from Colombia were also used to validate the solution for shipments coming into the Port of Rotterdam.

Improved Workflow and Real Time Visibility on the Status of Each Shipment
The costs associated with trade documentation processing and administration are estimated to be up to one-fifth the actual physical transportation costs.  A single vessel can carry thousands of shipments, and on top of the costs to move the paperwork, the documentation to support it can be delayed, lost, or misplaced, leading to further complications.

How it works:

  • Blockchain, an immutable, security rich and transparent shared network, provides each participant end-to-end visibility based on their level of permission.
  • Each participant in a supply chain ecosystem can view the progress of goods through the supply chain, understanding where a container is in transit.  They can also see the status of customs documents, or view bills of lading and other data.
  • Detailed visibility of the container’s progress through the supply chain is enhanced with the real-time exchange of original supply chain events and documents.
  • No one party can modify, delete or even append any record without the consensus from others on the network.
  • This level of transparency helps reduce fraud and errors, reduce the time products spend in the transit and shipping process, improve inventory management and ultimately reduce waste and cost. 

     

     

The solution enables the real-time exchange of original supply chain events and documents through a digital infrastructure, or data pipeline that connects the participants in a supply chain ecosystem.  This promotes sustainable transport by integrating shipping processes and partners, and establishing evaluation frameworks through increased transparency and trusted access.  An industry standard API for the centralized sharing of data and shipping information via the cloud was originally conceived by Frank Heijmann, head of trade relations, Customs Administration of the Netherlands, and David Hesketh, head of customs research and development, HM Revenue and Customs.  In close cooperation with the European Commission services (Directorate-General Migration and Home Affairs and the Directorate-General for Taxation and Customs Union), it was further developed under the EU FP7 CORE demonstrator project.

For shippers, the planned solution can help reduce trade documentation and processing costs and help eliminate delays associated with errors in the physical movement of paperwork.  It will also provide visibility of the container as it advances through the supply chain.  For customs authorities, the solution is intended to give real-time visibility, significantly improving the information available for risk analysis and targeting, which may eventually lead to increased safety and security, as well as greater efficiency in border inspection clearance procedures.

The solution developed by Maersk and IBM is based on the open source Linux Foundation’s open source Hyperledger Fabric.  The solution is expected to be widely available to support multiple parties across the ocean shipping industry ecosystem later this year.  IBM hosts the solution on the IBM Cloud and the IBM high-security business network, delivered via IBM Bluemix.

Keywords: Blockchain Technology, IBM Cloud, Logistics Industry, Shipping Industry, Global Trade, Trade Documentation, ARC Advisory Group.

 

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