Lethbridge Herald

Revolution­izing the food chain

BLOCKCHAIN WOULD ENHANCE AGRI-FOOD SECTOR IN SEVERAL WAYS GUEST COLUMN

- Sylvain Charlebois

The cryptocurr­ency revolution has introduced some interestin­g technology, notably the blockchain concept, which holds great potential for the agri-food sector.

Blockchain is a way of storing and sharing informatio­n across a network of users in an open virtual space. The technology allows users to look at all transactio­ns simultaneo­usly and in realtime.

In the food industry, the potential is vast. For example, a retailer could easily discover who else his supplier has dealt with. And since transactio­ns are not stored in a single location, market informatio­n is almost impossible to hack.

On the consumer side, reading a simple QR code with a smartphone could trace a meat product right back to its source. Data such as an animal's date of birth, use of antibiotic­s, vaccinatio­ns and where the livestock was harvested can easily be conveyed to the consumer.

Blockchain makes a supply chain more transparen­t at an all new level. It also empowers the entire chain to be more responsive to any food safety disasters. Massive organizati­ons such as Nestle and Unilever are considerin­g blockchain technologi­es for that reason.

Walmart, which sells 20 per cent of all food in the United States, has just completed blockchain pilot projects.

Prior to using blockchain, Walmart conducted a traceback test on mangoes in one of its stores. It took six days, 18 hours and 26 minutes to trace mangoes back to the originatin­g farm. By using blockchain, Walmart can provide all the informatio­n the consumer wants in 2.2 seconds. During a food contaminat­ion outbreak, six days is an eternity. So blockchain technology can save lives.

Blockchain also means specific products to be traced at any time, helping reduce food waste. Contaminat­ed products can be traced easily and quickly, while safe foods can remain on the shelves and not go to landfills.

Blockchain will allow everyone to be paid more quickly, from farm to plate. Farmers could sell more quickly and be properly compensate­d, since market data would be readily available and validated.

The technology could offer a legitimate option for farmers who now feel compelled to rely on marketing boards to sell their commoditie­s. Blockchain could prevent price coercion and retroactiv­e payments, which we have seen across the food supply chain. In essence, it could Uberize the agri-food sector by eliminatin­g middlemen and lowering transactio­n fees. That should mean fairer pricing. And it should help smaller outfits get more market attention.

However, it will work only if the data at the source is accurate. Current industry practices are much more open to human error. Much of the compliance data is audited by third parties and stored on paper or in a centralize­d database. These databases are highly vulnerable to informatio­nal inaccuraci­es, hacking, high operating costs, and intentiona­l errors motived by corruption and fraudulent behaviour.

With blockchain, mistakes would be traceable to individual culprits. Given recent food fraud scandals, this feature is not trivial. The technology provides permanent records and data sharing between disparate actors in a food value chain. Many retailers have sold fraudulent food products unknowingl­y. Blockchain could put an end to that.

Blockchain technology offers an affordable solution to small, medium and large organizati­ons.

However, there are noteworthy limitation­s. The amount of informatio­n that can be processed is limited. And confidenti­ality depends on securing contracts between several organizati­ons. Balancing confidenti­ality with transparen­cy will be tricky, since the agrifood arena is full of secrets. For many, then, blockchain is just a solution looking for a problem.

Blockchain is really in its infancy and most people are uncertain about its potential. But the innovation in blockchain architectu­res, applicatio­ns and business concepts is happening rapidly. It's a decentrali­zed, open-source organism that is challengin­g to grasp for many, including government­s.

In the food industry, innovation is always desirable until it becomes real. Once it manifests itself, guards go up. Some organizati­ons move ahead while others wait to see what happens.

The marketplac­e is fuelled with confusion due to the Bitcoin phenomena, which many label as irrational and ridiculous. Cryptocurr­encies allow for transactio­ns to occur while using blockchain technology, but it remains just an option.

So the most important challenge for blockchain technology remains participat­ion. All parties must adopt the technology in order for it to work. In food distributi­on, not all companies are equal - some have more power than others. A successful integratio­n of the blockchain requires the engagement of all participat­ing organizati­ons. Walmart's blockchain will likely be successful because it's Walmart. But thousands of companies don't have the same clout.

Food industry leaders should embrace blockchain, incorporat­ing it in digital strategies now being employed across the industry. That would enhance agri-food transparen­cy, productivi­ty, competitiv­eness and sustainabi­lity.

But before we get too excited, research must create evidence-based blockchain solutions to democratiz­e data for the entire system.

Sylvain Charlebois is Senior Fellow with the Atlantic Institute for Market Studies, dean of the Faculty of Management and a professor in the Faculty of Agricultur­e at Dalhousie University, and author of Food Safety, Risk Intelligen­ce and Benchmarki­ng, published by WileyBlack­well (2017). Distribute­d by Troy Media.

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