BLOCKCHAIN COMES TO WORLD OF HUMANITARIAN AID
Aid charities experimenting with technology to improve their work
BLOCKCHAIN, the technology behind the cryptocurrency bitcoin, is taking root in a sector far from finance: the world of humanitarian aid.
By offering refugees a virtual identity, reassuring donors that their money is being well spent, or rushing funds where they are needed most, aid charities are experimenting with the technology in the hopes that it can improve their work.
“We are at the very beginning. There is a lot of hype,” said Christopher Fabian, leader of United Nations Children’s Fund’s (Unicef) Ventures Fund, which invests in open source technology solutions.
Last year, Unicef brought together Russian-speaking blockchain experts in a meeting in Kazakhstan.
The goal? To develop a “smart contract” that would facilitate transactions between the organisation and its numerous partners for deliveries and payments, if certain conditions were met.
“It totally failed, but we learned a lot from that and will do the same challenge this year in Mexico,” Fabian said, adding that he could envision projects using blockchain for the “social good” — even if most of them will fail.
But the agency is thirsty for innovation.
Its French office has also launched an operation dubbed Game Chaingers (for blockchain), which challenges tech geeks and gaming enthusiasts to install on their computers software aimed at creating Ethereum, a virtual currency, to help Syrian children.
Blockchain allows users to create and spread information across a large network of computers, which its proponents say lends it transparency and security. And, the applications for the technology are multiplying quickly.
For aid and development groups, blockchain can come in all shapes and sizes.
Aid donors could, for example, trace their contributions as they spread across an organisation.
The platform Disberse, supported by a network of 42 humanitarian groups, already roadtested this application by tracking money sent by a British association to four schools in Swaziland.
In theory, the technique can reduce transaction costs, fight corruption by making everything transparent, and allow a better record of where food aid is directed, or make sure that medicines are not counterfeited.
Those in charge of programmes that directly send money to people in need also see it as a way of more easily controlling the disbursement of funds or avoiding use of financial intermediaries such as banks, which might also take a cut.
“In the old days, we were delivering aid at the back of the truck,” said Alex Sloan, a consultant at the World Food Programme’s (WFP) Innovation Accelerator, which works with startups and others to help fight hunger.
“Now, we are moving toward distributing cash to our beneficiaries, in the form of actual cash, through vouchers, ecards, etc.”
Sloan’s organisation has already field-tested a pilot project in Jordan’s Azraq refugee camp, where Syrian refugees can use iris-identification technology at a cash register to buy food and supplies.
The amount of money is then passed on via a blockchain-based computing platform.
The program is currently private and used only by the WFP, making it more of a database project than a real blockchain.
But Sloan said it could serve as a “tool to bring different partners and organisations together to collaborate and make the industry much more effective.”