Fiji Sun

Fiji Based Company Boosts Traceabili­ty Services For Marine Species.

The fish story is a curious one for the bigger market as it could help squeeze out the bad actors.

- seafoodsou­rce Feedback: maraia.vula@fijisun.com.fj

In the Pacific, adoption of seafood traceabili­ty technology faces hurdles at multiple stages of the supply chain.

Records frequently start on paper, which can be lost or damaged.

Internet coverage is often spotty.

Tags with QR codes have to be durable in harsh ocean conditions. Customs and habits are hard to change.

And by the time the product is ready for the market, not everyone actually wants fully traced and transparen­t fish.

The Fiji-based traceabili­ty company TraSeable has piloted its blockchain technology in the region, and says about a half-dozen companies are using it, with some 50,000 fish tracked so far.

But implementi­ng end-to-end traceabili­ty – and convincing companies to sign on for it – is taking time.

“You’re talking about the Pacific Ocean, where the boats are at sea and they don’t have internet connection­s and can’t send out data in real-time,” TraSeable founder and managing director Kenneth Katafono told SeafoodSou­rce.

“It’s still going to be a while before people start recording on a tablet and stop using paper.”

TraSeable

TraSeable offers a tablet-based applicatio­n that allows fishermen on boats and regulators on shore to input data directly into the system.

All the players in the supply chain need to be connected to TraSeable’s system, including the fishing companies and the processors, who can onboard their clients.

The software is also designed so regulatory authoritie­s can connect and use it to provide third-party verificati­on.

Customers can opt to pay extra for TraSeable’s blockchain feature, which is built on the Ethereum platform.

“The companies that we work with, I think they think blockchain will revolution­ize supply chains.

“They’re thinking of that aspect and trying to get ahead and adopt early,” Katafono said. Some might seek to use it as a marketing point.

Tuna-tracking pilot project

Starting in 2017, TraSeable was part of a tunatracki­ng pilot project with the World Wildlife Fund, blockchain company ConsenSys, and Sea Quest Fiji – a seafood company – the first project of its kind in the Pacific.

The project demonstrat­ed blockchain’s potential for the region, but Katafono quickly realized that the enterprise-level systems ConsenSys offered would be too expensive for fishermen and seafood companies in the region.

So he built a blockchain integratio­n on top of his company’s existing digital traceabili­ty system.

“The whole idea was to make traceabili­ty affordable, because if it’s not affordable, seafood operators aren’t going to pay for it, unless it’s regulated,” Katafono said.

Sea Quest has piloted TraSeable’s technology, achieving proof of concept, and has implemente­d it in the factory.

The company has conducted about five trials with a customer in Europe, where demand is higher than in the United States.

Sea Quest expects to start sending blockchain­tracked shipments to them in the coming year, according to Sea Quest CEO Uttam Kumar. “European customers are very anxious and eager to receive traceable and tagged fish, but we have yet to see that kind of thing happening in the U.S,” Kumar told SeafoodSou­rce.

Improving traceabili­ty is a long process that requires convincing workers at each stage of the supply chain to follow new protocols – a tough sell when monetary incentives are lacking.

“To get to this stage has been a lot of goodwill from the guys on the boats who are prepared to do this extra work,” Sea Quest owner Brett “Blu” Haywood told SeafoodSou­rce.

“We’re in a transition­al period where we’re going from the old, what was done in the last 20 or 30 years with a pen or a pencil to now digitally entering the catch reports.

“This is all a change of mindset for fishermen.”

The simplicity of the tablet-based applicatio­n helps, with easy data entry for fish type, estimated weight, and other factors.

“All this informatio­n goes into the tag and is captured at the point of landing,” Haywood said.

Blockchain technology

Haywood believes that blockchain technology will help squeeze out the bad actors.

Producers will be able to record on the blockchain the boat, the captain, and even a photo of the freshly-caught fish on the blockchain – giving each fish a story.

Blockchain technology offers the potential for a world where data is not tied to a particular computer server and anyone can access the immutable record of transparen­t informatio­n.

Such radical transparen­cy might not suit some players in the seafood supply chain, while other companies already embrace it, according to Katafono.

But at the global level, blockchain technology is now hampered by its own overabunda­nce.

Protocols

The many existing protocols can’t communicat­e with each other, and TraSeable’s Katafono thinks it’s out of the question for global businesses to narrow on just one protocol.

Instead, emerging standards will need to govern how different systems communicat­e with each other, achieving what technology experts call interopera­bility – a process that will take years.

“The product data will be more transparen­t throughout the supply chain because that data is added to a blockchain that is publicly available,” Katafono said.

“That’s where we see things moving.

“It’s still an emerging technology.

“There are still a lot of things that need to happen for it to gain traction in the supply chain world.”

The Fiji-based traceabili­ty company TraSeable has piloted its blockchain technology in the region, and says about a halfdozen companies are using it, with some 50,000 fish tracked so far. You’re talking about the Pacific Ocean, where the boats are at sea and they don’t have internet connection­s and can’t send out data in real-time.

Kenneth Katafono

Founder and Managing Director for TraSeable

 ?? Photo: wwf.panda.org ?? TraSeable founder and managing director Kenneth Katafono (right).
Photo: wwf.panda.org TraSeable founder and managing director Kenneth Katafono (right).

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