Canada’s transcontinental railway, Canadian Pacific (CP), has joined the Blockchain in Transport Alliance (BiTA). CP announced its new membership in an official press release on July 31.
According to the announcement, CP is looking to support improvements in supply chain technology through blockchain technology. BiTA says that by joining the group, CP is helping them to drive global supply chain interoperability.
BiTA president Patrick Duffy also commented on the potential benefits of blockchain in the transportation sector, saying that the new tech “has the potential to smooth the transactions that occur between shippers and carriers, but it requires the active participation of transportation leaders like CP."
The Blockchain in Transport Alliance
According to the announcement, BiTA has nearly 500 member organizations in the freight, transportation, logistics and affiliated industries. Members reportedly share a common goal of facilitating the adoption of new technology in these sectors, and work to both establish industry standards and provide education on blockchain solutions and distributed ledger technology.
Speaking to the Canadian Broadcast Corporation, Duffy expounded on the issue of transportation currently requiring multiple tracking systems — like enterprise resource planning (ERP) platforms — saying that more systems mean more room for human error:
"When you order a pair of shoes and they're manufactured in Vietnam, currently the information you put into the website where you order those shoes goes from a website into an ERP [...] that's transmitted to a manufacturer's system […] the possibilities of the number of people involved and the number of technology systems involved, it grows exponentially [...] At each one of those steps there's an opportunity for human-induced error."
Blockchain interoperability in transportation
As previously reported by Cointelegraph, multiple companies recently conducted an international container shipment using an interoperable blockchain platform. In July, Samsung SDS, Dutch bank ABN AMRO and the Port of Rotterdam successfully completed a tracked shipment from South Korea to the Netherlands.
The platform, called DELIVER, was co-developed by the three participating organizations, and purportedly allows for shipments to be instantly financed, tracked and conducted paperlessly.