Blockchain, technology behind Bitcoin, emerges as key tool in food safety battle
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2017/06/04/business/tech/blockchain-technology-behind-bitcoin-emerges-key-tool-food-safety-battle/?utm_source=Daily+News+Updates&utm_campaign=f28f81e5bc-Sunday_email_updates05_06_2017&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_c5a6080d40-f28f81e5bc-333371537#.WTTt-DfhXIU
NEW YORK – The food industry
is turning to the same technology used by virtual currencies to
strengthen food safety and inventory management by tracking meats and
crops from farm to table.
Working with IBM, retail giant Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is
testing the technology system on mangos in the United States and pork in
China.
Blockchain, the underlying technology behind virtual
currency bitcoin, is a digital system that allows parties to transact
using individual codes for goods.
“I see a lot of potential to create what I call a digital
and transparent food system,” said Wal-Mart food safety vice president
Frank Yiannas.
The technology enables different parties in the supply chain
to share details such as the date an animal was slaughtered or the
weather conditions at harvest time.
Data can be stored through a photograph on a smartphone that is transmitted onto a dedicated platform.
The system also can also counter fraud and mistaken deliveries, champions of the technology say.
“The advantage of blockchain is that the ledger is
immediately updated and all the parties have access to the latest
information,” said Bill Fearnley, Jr. an expert at market intelligence
firm IDC.
Supporters of blockchain are especially keen to address
salmonella and other food safety problems that can cause health scares
that weigh on corporate reputation and damage sales.
The technology allows a more efficient response if there is a
problem, enabling companies to locate the source of an incident more
quickly, Yiannas said.
He pointed to a 2006 case where it took hundreds of
investigators and two weeks to identify the source of bad spinach under a
paper-based system.
But blockchain “generally takes days to trace,” Yiannas said. “The more accurately you can track food, the better.”
The other great virtue of blockchain is enhanced
transparency by letting consumers look up key information on where food
comes from, an asset amid growing concerns about genetically modified
crops and artificial ingredients.
That additional transparency also can help promote more desirable practices.
British online startup Provenance used blockchain technology
to test tuna caught in Indonesia to help corroborate claims the fish
were responsibly caught.
The technology also has been embraced by companies in the
jewelry business to fight the sale of “conflict diamonds,” which come
from war-torn regions.
“Our goal is to provide transparency at every step of a
diamond’s journey and ultimately reshape the way we trade diamonds
globally,” said Leanne Kemp chief executive of Everledger, a British
company that tracks diamonds from the mines to jewelry stores.
But to completely function as a system, all the parties need to participate, Fearnley said.
Danish shipping giant Maersk estimates the technology could
save billions of dollars by eliminating fraud and incorrect deliveries.
It is testing the technology with container ships between Kenya and the
Netherlands.
But the transition will require investment. A refrigerated
product raised in Africa and shipped to Europe requires at least 30
people with some 200 interactions among parties, including customs,
taxes, and food safety oversight.
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