L FEBRUARY 19
AID DONORS Blockchain allows users to create and spread information across a large network of computers, which its proponents say lends it both transparency and security.
And the applications 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 road-tested 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 Innovation Accelerator, which works with start-ups and others to help fight hunger.
“Now, we are moving towards distributing cash to our beneficiaries, in the form of actual cash, through vouchers, e-cards, et cetera.”
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 programme is currently private and used only by the WFP, making it more of a database for the technology are
IMPLICATIONS The expansion of blockchain is not without risk. Besides the technical constraints, such as the need for an Internet connection, blockchain poses some basic questions about governance and data protection.
How to ensure, for example, that key information about refugees is not hacked by dictatorial regimes? Who authenticates the data? Which countries accept virtual portfolios?
“It’s hard to navigate the regulatory environment or the lack of it,” said Rosa Akbari, technology adviser at the US charity Mercy Corps.
Her group recently teamed up with tech giants Microsoft and Accenture for the ID2020 Alliance, working on a virtual identity model to help refugees.
“We need to have more understanding of what is going on and we want to have a seat at the table,” said Akbari.
Blockchain has enormous potential but still has a long way to go, she said.
In fragile states, and dealing with people facing great hardship, “there could be some scary implications if we don’t do it responsibly,” she said.