Gulf News

Universal Tubes and Tata in first blockchain steel trade

HSBC OVERSEES PAPERLESS DEAL INVOLVING A UAE FIRM

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The first blockchain­based trade finance deal in the global steel industry has been struck — and it involves a UAE-based business.

The transactio­n was done by UAE’s Universal Tubes & Plastic Industries Ltd. and the Indian metals giant Tata Steel. It involved Universal Tubes importing its order of flat carbon steel to the UAE from Tata Steel’s India base.

The transactio­n, with HSBC Bank overseeing it, confirms the “operationa­l viability of blockchain as an alternativ­e to convention­al exchanges of paper-based documentat­ion”.

It was done over the ‘Contour’ blockchain platform in which HSBC is a founding shareholde­r. “We are confident this will pave the way for widespread adoption by other clients, counterpar­ties and industries, many of whom we are already in talks with,” said Sunil Veetil, Regional Head of Global Trade & Receivable­s Finance (GTRF) at HSBC.

The platform allows all parties to have visibility of a trade with no single organisati­on having control of all the data.

By using blockchain, the reduced transactio­n time will boost the efficiency of trade between the two countries, which is valued at around $60 billion with the UAE being India’s third largest trading partner.”

HSBC statement

Why is it a first?

Apart from being the first such in the steel industry, this was the first “integrated paperless letter of credit and eDocs transactio­n for a steel export”.

And also the first end-to-end paperless trade combining electronic bills of lading and digitised letter of credit in the steel commodity business.

Go all out for blockchain

While the transfer of goods between the UAE and India takes a relatively short time, the “administra­tive paperwork can often impede delivery,” according to a statement by HSBC.

“By using blockchain, the reduced transactio­n time will boost the efficiency of trade between the two countries, which is valued at around $60 billion with the UAE being India’s third largest trading partner.”

Trade finance is being seen as a natural fit for blockchain­created transactio­ns. Earlier this week, there was the formal launch of one such platform — UAE Trade Connect — that brought together seven leading local banks, including First Abu Dhabi Bank, and Etisalat.

The consortium’s intent is to de-risk chances of over- or under-invoicing in trade finance as well as other frauds. UAE Trade Connect will expand its base by adding more banks and aligning with similar blockchain initiative­s at the global level.

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