Some companies are already using blockchain to
securely and centrally understand the flow of goods and services. But it also
helps multiple parties share information and operate more efficiently.
Written by H.
Paris Burstyn
8th
June 2020
Key takeaways from this
article:
- Blockchain enables users to improve quality and customer experience.
- In IoT supply chains, blockchain can verify product provenance and
track assets creating trusted relationships between suppliers and
buyers.
- Several well-known companies have implemented blockchain in some of
their supply chains.
Blockchain isn’t just for
currency anymore. This digital ledger technology is a way of managing
transactions and doing business.
Combined with IoT
infrastructure, blockchain can support and secure a wide range of supply chain
transactions among businesses.
Blockchain is a secure digital
ledger that can track data to generate both trusted and immutable exchanges.
IoT connects the networks, monitoring devices and applications to track the
locations and conditions of products in the supply chain.
In IoT supply chains,
blockchain can verify product provenance and track assets, said Alexandra Rehak,
an analyst at Omdia. It creates trusted
relationships between suppliers and buyers by generating encrypted,
unchangeable records.
Rehak noted that blockchain
isn’t used to increase revenue, but to enable users to improve quality and
customer experience. Manufacturers of “branded goods,” from routers to luxury
items, use it to track component parts to prevent gray market items from
slipping into the supply chain. This application assures customers get what
they pay for.
Several well-known companies
have implemented blockchain in some of their supply chains. Most of these
started with individual products, but users expect to deploy it across multiple
products.
Tracking the Food Supply
In September 2018, Walmart launched its Food
Traceability Initiative after a large outbreak of E. coli in romaine lettuce
and Salmonella in various products, from eggs to breakfast cereal, rocked the
grocery industry.
It gave its fresh leafy green
suppliers a year to enable visibility into produce tracking from store back to
the farm. Tracing information includes where the greens were grown, when they
were harvested, and the supply chain flow before reaching Walmart’s facilities,
stores and clubs. Tejas Bhatt, senior director, Global Food Safety Innovation
at Walmart said that a majority of Walmart’s leafy green suppliers now use blockchain
technology.
Walmart wants to deliver a
seamless and transparent food supply chain to engender customer trust. “We
believe we can better protect customers from outbreaks by being more proactive
than reactive to issues in the supply chain,” said Bhatt in an email interview.
“We want to enhance the customer shopping experience by delivering safe, fresh
quality foods whether they shop in store or online with Walmart.”
The Internet of Things (IoT)
is a cornerstone of tracking freshness by gathering data on the produce’s
shipping environment. To monitor shipping conditions for produce, IoT sensors
monitor and control the various devices in the fleets of containers hauling the
greens. Tracking temperatures and other factors, IoT alerts Walmart and its suppliers
if conditions stray from the limits that guarantee freshness and quality.
Early results encouraged
Walmart to expand the requirement to its green bell pepper suppliers, which
have until July 2020 to adopt the blockchain platform. None of the suppliers
has requested an extension despite the COVID-19 pandemic, according to Bhatt. Walmart
continues to expand the rollout to deliver fresh, high-quality, and safe foods
to customers.
Walmart’s blockchain launched
as a food safety initiative, said Bhatt. But now the company has expanded its
efforts to other parts of the business, including merchandising, sourcing,
technology and trade. It also conducted pilots with the U.S. Customs and Border
Protection Agency on facilitating faster flow of goods across borders.
Bhatt expects to see
incremental benefits as Walmart expands the initiative to other high-risk food
items over the next few years. The company aims to get smarter at managing food
safety and quality across its supply chains as it compiles more data on
blockchain over time
“For Walmart,” Bhatt said,
“the [effort] has matured to a point where it’s no longer a ’blockchain’
initiative. Blockchain is just a tool we’re using to deliver transparency. Our
goal is to deliver safe, fresh, quality foods to our customers. Blockchain is enabling us to do that.”
KPMG, IBM, Merck, and Walmart Collaboration With FDA
In February 2019, Walmart
announced it would collaborate with KPMG, IBM and Merck to work on the Federal
Drug Administration’s (FDA) program supporting the U.S. Drug
Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA) that addresses requirements
to identify, track and trace prescription medicines and vaccines distributed
within the U.S.
The program developed an
electronic, interoperable system that identifies and traces certain
prescription drugs as they are distributed within the United States.
According to Asma Ishak-Mahdi, Walmart’s pharmaceutical blockchain lead, the
companies formally kicked off the program in May 2019. Between June and
November, the team designed, built and tested the solution.
In May 2019 a Deloitte report described survey results
from potential and existing blockchain users around the globe. It noted that,
on a tactical level, consortia must consider factors that could be difficult to
resolve in a group setting including the following:
- Defining goals
- Governance/participation
structure
- Decision making (e.g., equal voting or rotational power)
- Who owns the solutions intellectual property
In the Walmart consortium,
partners defined the scope to test two Merck vaccine products, which were
already dispensed at Walmart to track and trace prescription products and
create a shared view of product movement, Ishak-Mahdi wrote in an email. “Merck
and Walmart, along with IBM and KPMG, designed, developed and tested the
technology, working together as partners.”
Each company contributed its
individual experiences and expertise to the trial, Ishak-Mahdi said. IBM
provided its blockchain knowledge and its currently in-use global platform (Food Trust). KPMG brought its experience
in solving DSCSA’s 2019 requirements with the Healthcare
Distribution Alliance (HDA). Merck and Walmart defined
business requirements and added operational subject matter expertise related to
manufacturer and dispenser roles and responsibilities that were incorporated
into the pilot design.
The group built a shared
permissioned blockchain network that allows real-time monitoring of products.
It reduces the time needed to track and trace inventory; allows timely
retrieval of reliable distribution information; increases accuracy of data
shared among network members; and helps determine the integrity of products in
the distribution chain, including whether products are kept at the correct
temperature.
The final report
included a decision to add scope and participants and was compiled in December
2019 and January 2020, Ishak-Mahdi said. The consortium submitted it to the FDA
in February 2020. It will be posted once the FDA finishes its review
of the report.
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