Chicken and greens: $97B retail firm uses IBM blockchain to track food supply

Chicken and greens: $97B retail firm uses IBM blockchain to track food supply

Multinational retail giant Carrefour will use IBM's blockchain tech to track two major food categories as part of a growing reorganization of global supply lines. IBM’s food-tracking blockchain technology will be used by the Carrefour multinational retail firm to track food supply lines from the farm to the store. An agreement between Majid Al Futtaim — the firm that operates Carrefour in the Middle East — and IBM will see the retail giant use the IBM Food Trust initially to track two food categories: chicken and microgreens.The IBM Food Trust is a blockchain-specific platform designed for....


Related News

Blockchain Joins Efforts to Improve Food Traceability amid Rising Waste and Safety Fears

Blockchain technology has emerged as a tool for addressing an important global issue: the growing complexity of the food supply chain and the increasing amount of wasted food, according to a senior research fellow at the University of Surrey. Writing in The Conversation, an online source of information from the academic and research community, senior research fellow, Phil Godsiff said that a recent analysis suggested that half of U.S. food production is wasted, with global estimates above 30 percent. The growing use of sensors in the food supply chain, paired with blockchain technology,....

Walmart & IBM Improves Food Safety With Blockchain Tech

Walmart recently opened its Food Safety Collaboration Center in Beijing. The new initiative means the multinational is collaborating with IBM and Tsinghua University to improve food quality through the supply chain. It means the food safety partnership is utilizing blockchain technology to provide better food tracking and consumer safety. Three....

Walmart and IBM Partner to Put Chinese Pork on a Blockchain

Retail giant Walmart and multinational technology company, IBM, have teamed up put Chinese pork on the blockchain, ensuring consumer confidence in the food industry, reports Fortune. Teaming up with Tsinghua University in Beijing, it is hoped that by digitally tracking the movement of pork in China on bitcoin’s underlying distributed ledger, it will prevent food disasters such as those that have been reported in China. According to Forbes, in 2008, a toxic mixture of milk and infant formula combined with melamine, killed six children, put thousands of others in hospital and sickened much....

IBM Launches Blockchain Supply Chain for Chinese Pharma Retail

IBM is firmly solidifying its proactive lead as a blockchain solutions provider with another launch of a blockchain platform in China, this time in the pharmaceutical retail sector. Developed in partnership between IBM and Chinese supply chain management firm Hejia, the Yijian Blockchain Technology Application System was launched this week with the aim to improve the operational efficiencies of supply chain finance among pharmaceutical retailers procuring drugs. The blockchain platform is based on the Hyperledger Fabric, code from the cross-industry open-source collaborative Hyperledger....

Walmart Wants to Apply Blockchain to Other Products Beyond Pork

Trying to make pork products in China safer was just the first step of Walmart’s global plans for blockchain. The pilot unveiled last week uses technology from the Hyperledger project to track pork shipping information, including farm origination details, batch numbers and storage temperatures on a secure blockchain. Over the months ahead, the retail giant wants to expand on that work. Walmart vice president of global food safety Frank Yiannas told CoinDesk that, in anticipation of a successful pilot launch, the company is already looking to the future for other applications. Yiannas told....