Kuwait Times

Maersk, IBM to launch blockchain-based platform for global trade

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COPENHAGEN: The world’s largest container shipping firm A.P. Moller-Maersk is teaming up with IBM to create an industry-wide trading platform it says can speed up trade and save billions of dollars.

The global shipping industry has seen little innovation since the container was invented in the 1950s, and cross-border trade still leaves an enormous trail of paperwork and bureaucrac­y.

Success of the platform, which will be made available to the ocean shipping industry around mid2018, depends on whether Maersk and IBM can convince shippers, freight forwarders, ocean carriers, ports and customs authoritie­s to sign up.

Blockchain technology powers the digital currency bitcoin and enables data sharing across a network of individual computers. It will help manage and track tens of millions of shipping containers globally by digitising the supply chain process from end to end, the companies said.

“The big thing that is missing from this industry to digitize and unleash the potential of the technology is really to create a form of utility that brings standards across the entire ecosystem,” Maersk’s Chief Commercial Officer Vincent Clerc said in an interview. A shipment of refrigerat­ed goods from East Africa to Europe can go through nearly 30 people and organizati­ons and involve more than 200 different communicat­ions, according to Maersk. Documentat­ion and bureaucrac­y can be as much as a fifth of the total cost of moving a container.

“There is a strong push from the end-customer to see this change. We may meet initial resistance form one part of the ecosystem,” Clerc said. “The success of the platform depends on acceptance of all participan­ts.” Customs and port authoritie­s in the United States, Singapore, the Netherland­s and China’s Guangdong province have shown interest in using the platform and some other shipping companies are also interested, he said.

Maersk, which handles one in seven containers shipped globally, sold off its energy business in 2017 to focus entirely on transporta­tion and logistics.

A cyberattac­k last year caused some of the biggest-ever disruption­s to global shipping, displaying the vulnerabil­ity of out-dated communicat­ion systems. Maersk’s container and port operations were hit for weeks, as it struggled to bring its IT systems including some 1500 applicatio­ns back online. The joint venture will be headed by the previous chief of Maersk Line’s North American operations, Michael J. White. Maersk and IBM first announced their cooperatio­n in March.

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