Blockchain use cases have to be identified before the
technology can be adopted. Five experts do exactly that across their respective
industries Five blockchain use cases: from property to sustainability image
As with any technology, blockchain development has to solve a problem.
Industry use cases will help bring the infamous tech into the mainstream.
Blockchain is touted as a game changer technology. But,
without industry blockchain use cases, it will never reach its predicted
potential.
The blockchain development services have already been proclaimed a potential
saviour in industries, such as the supply chain, logistics and finance, or
rather a number of use cases have been identified, but — really — it will have
an impact on a wide variety of industries, in a number of ways.
1. Property
Nicole Anderson, chairwoman of MIRIS AS, explains:
“Real estate projects require substantial amounts of time to
complete which means investors are financially bound to projects for long
periods before they can earn a return. Added to that, investors lack visibility
of project progression.
“By using ‘smart contracts’ and asset-backed tokenisation of
real estate projects, platforms based on blockchain will reduce conflicts,
increase oversight, and reduce the need for intermediaries. In addition,
investment in real estate projects will be fractionalised, meaning investors
who do not have deep pockets can participate in opportunities and be ‘part’ of
a project. This is expected to have huge implications for the retail investment
market.”
What blockchain
technology means for the property sector
Geoff Dunnett, professional services director at secure
payments solution, Shieldpay, also comments: “The integration of digital
solutions is breathing new life into the property market and offers to innovate
the buying process for prospective home owners. While other sectors have
adapted to, and met, changing consumer demand, the property market has remained
relatively stagnant, until now. The future is undoubtedly digital and
technology will revolutionise the sector over the next few years. Digital
escrow is already enhancing payments in the property market and the adoption of
blockchain technology in combination with this could change home buying as we
know it.
“In the UK, a main reason for delayed completions, which can
leave people waiting on the doorstep, is the movement of funds as payments go
from one law firm’s bank account to another and then to the ultimate
beneficiaries. Chains can be as long as 12 individual property transactions and,
if any of the payments do not happen on the agreed day, the chain can fall
apart, and it’s back to the start; a game of snakes of ladders.
“The use of a blockchain conveyancing system has the ability
to change this. It removes the need for solicitors, estate agents, banks and
home buyers to chase payments up and down a chain and instead gives complete
visibility over the status of the funds at any point during the transaction.
“Buyers will be able to move home on any day they choose,
including Bank Holidays and weekends, with confidence that their move will
happen. All with an added layer of security which verifies the identities of
all parties and the payment instructions involved, stopping fraudsters in their
tracks.”
2. Oil and gas
Mohamed El-Masri, founder and CEO of Permian, suggests:
“Blockchain could significantly enhance upstream, midstream
and downstream operations throughout the oil and gas sector. It has the
potential to make a great deal of the sector’s bureaucracy significantly more
efficient, for example making it easier and quicker to confirm when third-party
suppliers complete tasks so that funds can be released in a far more timely
way. It can also be used to monetise reserves in a way that has not previously
been possible, tokenising confirmed but not yet exploited deposits to help
investors, exploration and production firms, and refining and processing
operations, manage their activities and balance sheets.
“The deeper we look at the potential of the blockchain in
the oil and gas sector, the wider the range of opportunities from digitalising
global oilfield datasets becomes. Distributed ledger technology allows for
permanent transparency on a trust-protocol that integrates cloud-based servers.
The approach that we are taking requires graphic processing units and
high-performance computers. This would normally have a significant power
requirement, but by using flared natural gas that would otherwise be wasted, we
are simultaneously delivering massively enhanced business efficiency while also
making better use of natural resources.”
3. Enterprise sustainability
Vincent Manier, CFO at ENGIE Impact, says:
“To understand, and report on, the carbon footprint of an
enterprise is a highly complex undertaking. But businesses must get to grips
with it as quickly as possible, given that there are 40 countries that have
either established or are in the process of implementing a carbon pricing
system, which includes cap-and-trade or a carbon tax.
“One technology offers a solution to this challenge:
blockchain. This decentralised, communal record of information maintained by a
computer network is ideal for carbon reporting.
“At present, this process is one of self-reporting, with
little validation from external parties and it rarely covers the supply chain,
value chain or the footprint of products. Blockchain will turn the tables and
enable the participation of other stakeholders, whether internal or external,
and allow for near real-time insight into an enterprise’s entire carbon
footprint, including those of suppliers, distributors and customers.
“It will eliminate the possibility of window dressing statistics
and ultimately provide greater transparency and control, helping the c-suite to
achieve sustainability goals, ensure compliance with sustainability
regulations, and minimise exposure to carbon-related activities.”
Don’t let blockchain hype become your excuse for inertia –
blockchain supply chain can ensure trust
Is blockchain coming of age? Maybe we are moving beyond the
hype associated with cryptocurrencies, and onto a real world of practical
applications, such as ensuring trust between digital partners, with blockchain
for the supply chain. Then again, Gert Sylvest, of GM Tradeshift Frontiers says
that we must be realistic, blockchain on its own is not enough.
4. Supply chain
Gert Sylvest, co-founder and GM of Frontiers at Tradeshift,
explains:
“All transactions within the supply chain are subject to
questions about trust and transparency. The first generation of B2B networks
were fire-and-forget networks, where messages were sent between two or more
parties and then stored individually within each party.
“Blockchain makes hiding data on one side or the other of
that relationship impossible. Instead, transactions between shippers, sellers,
buyers, manufacturers, their banks and insurers are stored in a single, shared,
immutable distributed database which no single participant controls and
tampering is virtually impossible.
“The additional level of transparency blockchain helps
facilitate is particularly useful in applications like trade finance. An
enormous amount of money is trapped between buyers and suppliers – up to $9
trillion according to some analysts and only around 10-15% qualifies for
financing. One of the main reasons this figure is so low is a lack of
information. Banks don’t have ready financial information from most small to
medium enterprises, whether it’s credit scores or receivables collateral, to
assess whether an enterprise is worth the risk of financing.
“By utilising blockchain technology, we can share robust and
relevant information to a potential financier, without there being any question
on the validity of the data. What you’re effectively creating is an open
marketplace where banks and other financial institutions can compete for access
to a tokenised volume of receivables.
“Blockchain can play a role in facilitating the move away
from the traditional ways of estimating risk towards a more real-time,
transaction-based finance model where you can finance the individual dollar as
it’s moving through the supply chain as opposed to the whole company.
“There’s an important caveat in all of this however.
Technologies like blockchain are only useful if the underlying processes are
fully digital. Right now that is simply not the case. Just look at invoicing
where only around 8% of global transactions are digitised. So, while blockchain
offers some interesting potential applications for supply chain, the more
immediate issue businesses should be focusing on right now is how to become
digital by default.”
5. Copyright infringement and protecting IP rights
Joe Naylor, CEO of ImageRights, concludes:
“In the beginning, Bitcoin stole the show when evangelists
would proselytise the impending revolution brewing with blockchain technology.
But blockchain’s raison d’être is to secure information and prove something
existed at a certain point in time. Blockchain’s advantages are therefore not
confined to the world of crypto and financial services, but rather can be
applied within a multitude of industries.
“As such, blockchain is gaining traction in the world of
copyright. The immutability of data inscribed into a blockchain underlies it’s
fundamental function: proof of existence.
“Proof of existence is essential when establishing proof of
authorship, proof of copyright ownership, and proof that the evidence presented
when enforcing one’s copyrights is true. By inscribing hashes into a blockchain
of the data and links between a photo, its copyright management information and
registration with a court-recognised registry, such as those operated by the
United States Copyright Office, the Canadian Intellectual Property Office, or
the Copyright Protection Centre of China, copyright holders have an impregnable
claim of copyright ownership and can pursue the remedies available to them by
statute.
“Copyright infringement threatens the livelihoods of
creators worldwide; blockchain is enabling welcomed new solutions to help them
tackle these unpleasant challenges head-on.”
Article source: https://www.information-age.com/five-blockchain-use-cases-123484558/
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