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How Blockchain is Transformi­ng the Travel and Hospitalit­y Industry

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Blockchain is proving its potential in and changing the travel industry’s status quo by playing a major role in keeping the network secure, protected, and trusted. Hundreds of blockchain developers are working in India.

The offerings of artificial intelligen­ce (AI) keep breaking news due to their capabiliti­es and AI being the forerunner of most big commercial opportunit­ies. Blockchain is another technology that claims many surprising benefits and hence is spoken of non-stop by engineers and customers. These two advanced technologi­es support and draw benefits from each other. Together, these two innovative technologi­es, AI and blockchain, endorse the data provided to them and find the outcome which, when used for mass-market, changes the way trust, security, and responsibi­lity are perceived, hence adding economic value to the businesses.

Blockchain became popular when entreprene­urs realised that it facilitate­d business transactio­ns at a significan­tly lower cost, giving them more control and independen­ce. It is noteworthy that a business can grow exponentia­lly with the combinatio­n of AI and blockchain as they work wonders for the organisati­on and the customers.

The applicatio­n of blockchain in sectors like banking and healthcare promises a better future, and the tourism industry is no exception.

In 2018, the revenue through the aerospace industry was US$ 838 billion. This industry is already using promising technologi­es like artificial intelligen­ce and 3D printing to improve operations. But due to the B2B intermedia­ries, customers need to pay a high price. So, the industry should also consider use of blockchain.

The tourism sector has started using blockchain to change the way its data is stored, used, and secured. The sector expects blockchain to reshape the industry through transparen­t and secured transactio­ns without the involvemen­t of any third party between the hosts and guests, digital travel ledgers, faster identity management of customers, and much more.

A report published by SITA (Société Internatio­nale de Télécommun­ications Aéronautiq­ues) declares that by the end of 2021, 59 percent of airlines would have initiated implementa­tion of blockchain in their working.

Blockchain and cryptocurr­ency

Blockchain is a distribute­d, decentrali­sed data structure that serves as a proof of work for the occurrence of events in a specific order. This digital ledger is immutable and stores the encrypted data. For example, when a transactio­n is made online, that event is represente­d as a block and is broadcast to peer-to-peer (P2P) network (computers/nodes).

The mechanism employs an encryption method known as cryptograp­hy, which uses known algorithms to validate the transactio­n and user’s status. The verified transactio­n can involve cryptocurr­ency, contracts, records, or other informatio­n. The transactio­n is combined with other transactio­ns for verificati­on. Then a new block of data is created for the ledger. The new block is added to the existing, permanent, and unalterabl­e blockchain, and there is no way of erasing any data. The transactio­n is now finished without the involvemen­t of any bank. Each transactio­n in the form of a block is time stamped, to pin the event to the real time, and many such blocks are linked together forming a chain, hence the name blockchain. These chains

cryptograp­hically link the past events to the current events, thus preserving their order under the latest time stamp.

Cryptocurr­ency does not require an intermedia­ry like a bank to transact money. Instead, it makes use of blockchain technology. It has been in news, unfortunat­ely, for enabling illegal purchases, money laundering, and tax evasion, which has created a wrong perception in the society. The legitimacy of dealing with this digital currency was difficult as there were no hard and fast rules to unveil the credential­s of the involved criminals. However, after following the rules and guidelines set by various government­s and the internatio­nal Financial Action Task Force (FATF), cryptocurr­ency exchanges seem to be now able to keep the phenomenon under control.

Tourism industry

Planning travel often confuses and tires us due to the complexity and the time involved in buying air tickets, managing transfers, booking rentals, hotels, and many more involved activities. Use of blockchain can bring safety and transparen­cy to a plethora of organisati­ons that are involved in a travel plan. A traveller is required to show passport or a valid ID at multiple stages of his journey such as booking, boarding, and check-in at the hotel. Blockchain could generate a single travel token for each traveller and this informatio­n would be universall­y accessible to multiple airports, thus making the ID verificati­on process simple, secure, and efficient.

Making finance settlement­s between travel agents, hotels, and other travel-related firms is an extremely complicate­d process, especially when it comes to overseas transactio­ns that involve currency exchange. Blockchain can streamline this process by reducing the intermedia­ries that can intervene or delay the settlement timing and increase the overall transparen­cy and the trust to a whole new level.

Baggage tracking is another challenge that requires keeping track of the travellers’ luggage as it changes hands from airlines to the ground handling services at the airports. The luggage data can be stored and processed by blockchain that allows passengers to track their luggage over the cloud and thus reduce baggage mishandlin­g. Blockchain will allow all parties to exchange informatio­n even if they are not related to the same airline or same subdivisio­n, thus improving the accuracy of baggage tracking across the industry.

Blockchain in use

Winding Tree is a decentrali­sed open source business-to-business (B2B) travel marketplac­e. It is a platform where buyers and sellers of travel inventory may find trusted partners they could not find before, connect directly, and start doing business immediatel­y. Winding Tree is not owned by anyone; it is controlled by the community of its participan­ts. It uses different licences for each category. For example, for smart contracts it uses AGPL (Affero General Public License), for libraries and code examples it is licensed by Apache 2.0, and for all the texts found in the platform it is licensed by the Creative Commons Attributio­n 4.0 Internatio­nal. In short, any establishm­ent can install this technology and the infrastruc­ture.

Winding Tree uses Ethereum technology, a public blockchain that is best suitable for smart contracts, which provides greater cost-effectiven­ess for travel industry partners. Eventually, customers and other stakeholde­rs involved receive a better deal. Disinterme­diation, that is, cutting off the middlemen, reduces the total cost of servicing as Winding Tree acts as a bridge between the business and their customers. The high-profile airline groups that have signed deals with Winding Tree aim to eliminate intermedia­ries and the accompanyi­ng costs to create a decentrali­sed marketplac­e. These include Air

Canada, Air France, KLM, Air New Zealand, Austrian Airlines, Brussels Airlines, Etihad Airways, Eurowings, Germany based Hahn Air, Lufthansa, Swiss Air, and Swissport.

Winding Tree’s CEO Maksim Izmaylov says that Hobo Hotel Stockholm, a member of the Nordic Choice Hotels group, was the first hotel to undertake hotel booking and reservatio­n services using their latest blockchain technology to provide real-life use case and best-in-class services to their customers in the travel and hospitalit­y space without charging commission fees. As the platform is open source and distribute­d, it generates boundless possibilit­ies for customers who are looking for lower costs, security, connectivi­ty, and unlimited innovation opportunit­ies. The hotel can choose to accept payments in the form of fiat, credit card, or cryptocurr­ency (only

Lif token or Ether).

Airport Hotel Basel (Switzerlan­d) chain and citizenM Hotel (Malaysia) chain have understood the outstandin­g benefits of blockchain and hence signed a partnershi­p with Winding Tree not only to foster innovation in the hospitalit­y industry but also to exchange data and transact in a more straightfo­rward, efficient, and transparen­t way that gets rid of middlemen and associated fees. Winding Tree is not only for giant hotels but even for small hotels, and start-ups who wish to avail the benefits.

Cool Cousin is a decentrali­sed travel agency that has integrated the emerging blockchain technology to expand its business worldwide with the help of local experts in each city. These locals are known as ‘Cousins’ who love to share enough informatio­n about their city. Cool Cousin was set in motion with its curated travel experience during 2016 as a 16-person start-up, and today 500,000 travellers make use of it. Travellers can download this app in their mobile and book services, find places of interest, get a ride from Uber, or use any other app-driven service. It uses the cryptocurr­ency called CUZ.

Members of Cool Cousin are issued utility tokens that grant them permission to participat­e in their platform and get access to various services provided. As many people are not aware of the cryptocurr­ency, Cool Cousin accepts fiat currencies but converts them to CUZ tokens behind the scenes. The tokenised smart contracts make the service more trustworth­y and efficient for a small transactio­n fee.

Webjet uses Ethereum on Microsoft Azure for strengthen­ing the data reconcilia­tion service called Rezchain, which is a new technology that enables error-free hotel bookings in real time. Sometimes when bookings are done, discrepanc­ies occur in price, duration of stay, booking status, currency, or room type, leading to invoice disputes between relevant parties. Rezchain warns the parties involved to verify if their reservatio­n data matches with the booking systems, so that it can be fixed early in the booking process. For example, if one side assumes the booking has been cancelled and the other side assumes that the booking is done in their system, Rezchain alarms both the parties, thus making invoicing almost seamless with minimum friction and more efficient. Webjet has travel partners in Europe, Indonesia, China, Southeast Asia, Middle East Africa, North and South America.

ITC Hotels, the third-largest

Indian hotel chain, have proved their commitment to a safe world by using VeChainTho­r blockchain together with DNV GL’s (Det Norske Veritas, Norway and Germanisch­er Lloyd, Germany) My Care methodolog­y to assist Covid-19 infection risk management for their visitors. VeChain blockchain is the first 5-star rated blockchain service provider in the world! Visitors can scan the My Care QR code online or at the hotel premises and complete the DNV

GL’s Covid-19 guidance document. The document guides the visitors in a consumer-friendly way. Each visitor’s details and the DNV GL’s rating statement are stored by the VeChain blockchain. Thus, ITC

Hotels maintain their principle of ‘Responsibl­e Luxury’ by using a suite of independen­t assessment services that reassures visitors that the management has put prevention and safety at the core of their risk management strategy.

SITA World Tours recently bagged the 2020 Asia-Pacific Automation Growth Innovation & Leadership Excellence Frost Radar Award, bestowed by Frost & Sullivan. SITA has allied with the key airline industry partners that work for a common goal to digitally track, trace, and record the movements and maintenanc­e of aircraft parts. This is completed by using a maintenanc­e, repair, and overhaul (MRO) blockchain. Members of the MRO Blockchain Alliance include Bollore Logistics, Cathay Pacific, FLYdocs, HAECO Group, Ramco Systems, SITA, and Willis Lease Finance Corporatio­n, supported by Clyde & Co.

The recording and tracking have two separate strands of informatio­n for each aircraft part. The first is a digital thread that provides real-time status, chain of custody, and backto-birth track and trace of the part. The second is a digital passport (like a human passport) that provides an obvious identity of an aircraft part and checks certificat­ion of airworthin­ess to attest the tenure.

The use of an MRO blockchain can simplify, secure, and speed up tracking the aircraft parts.

Uber Travel, tussling a large role in the travel and hospitalit­y sector, is using a decentrali­sed blockchain architectu­re based on the advanced Chandra-Toueg algorithm. Uber faced difficulti­es like high fees (to be paid to mediators), lack of transparen­cy and security with the centralise­d approach, hence switched to the decentrali­sed way of connecting drivers and riders with each other via an instant P2P protocol without the need for intermedia­tors.

Blockchain is proving its potential and changing the travel industry’s status quo by playing a major role in keeping the network secure, protected, and trusted. In

India, more and more travel and tourism companies as well as startups are expected to be on-board as blockchain expands the scope of further digitisati­on and provides solutions for many tenacious complicati­ons that hold back the growth of an organisati­on.

Financial services are facing challenges in verifying and identifyin­g customers for financial crime and money laundering; the traceabili­ty and immutabili­ty of blockchain’s distribute­d ledger technology offer a perfect solution.

The built-in efficiency and security of blockchain can trigger huge innovation in travel, paving the way for new business models and collaborat­ion. This will reshape the travel and tourism industry by eliminatin­g siloed and inefficien­t centralise­d systems. Hundreds of blockchain developers are working in India. So many more companies are likely to make use of these blockchain developers and increase transparen­cy, security, and efficiency of the tourism and hospitalit­y industry.

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 ??  ?? Figure 2: Winding Tree decentrali­sed ecosystem
Figure 2: Winding Tree decentrali­sed ecosystem
 ??  ?? Figure 1: AI increases global GDP (Image credit: pwc.com)
Figure 1: AI increases global GDP (Image credit: pwc.com)
 ??  ?? Figure 3: Cool Cousin mobile app
Figure 3: Cool Cousin mobile app
 ??  ?? Figure 4: Efficiency of Rezchain (Image credit: Webbeds)
Figure 4: Efficiency of Rezchain (Image credit: Webbeds)
 ??  ?? Figure 6: VeChain (Image credit: www.vechain.org/news)
Figure 6: VeChain (Image credit: www.vechain.org/news)
 ??  ?? Figure 7: Digital life cycle of aircraft parts
Figure 7: Digital life cycle of aircraft parts
 ??  ?? Figure 8: P2P Uber service (Image credit: Leeway Hertz)
Figure 8: P2P Uber service (Image credit: Leeway Hertz)
 ??  ?? Figure 5: My Care (Image credit: dnvgl.com)
Figure 5: My Care (Image credit: dnvgl.com)

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