The Next Big Disruptor
Logistics Update Africa|September - October 2017

Its tamper-proof design and unparalleled transparency enables decentralised, digital and trusted transaction. Blockchain is set to change the way the world does business and why blockchain will transform the logistics industry.

Reji John
The Next Big Disruptor
Economists have been exploring people’s behavior for hundreds of years. They study how people make decision; how they act individually and in groups; and how they exchange value. They also study the institutions that facilitate trade, like legal systems, corporations and marketplaces. But today there is a new, technological institution that will fundamentally change how we exchange value, and it’s called the blockchain. It is said that blockchain will revolutionise trust on a global scale and the implications are huge. When blockchain technology turned from a geeky thing into a buzzword for major businesses a few years ago, it was only a matter of time before it expanded far beyond finance into other industries. Its advantages, like tamper-proof design, utter accountability and unparalleled transparency, have drawn attention from stakeholders of very diverse industries, including logistics.

The concept of a blockchain – a distributed, tamper-proof and time-stamped database of transactions that can be managed without intermediaries – is highly attractive in the supply chain domain, and the industry has launched a number of proof-of-concept initiatives.

In logistics, the best known blockchain pilot programme involved Maersk and IBM. It centered on creating a digital distributed ledger to create a single electronic place where all the myriad documents related to a shipment could be housed.

Coming at a time when the Danish shipping giant Maersk accounts for 15.8 percent of the world’s global shipping fleet traffic has experienced a sharp decrease in annual revenue, the application was designed to help save costs by moving the expensive and time-consuming paperwork between each of the counterparties to a blockchain-based smart contract system.

This story is from the September - October 2017 edition of Logistics Update Africa.

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This story is from the September - October 2017 edition of Logistics Update Africa.

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