Nations working to take nuclear weapons out of commission should turn to blockchain to build trust and make the process more secure, according to a new policy report.
As reported by Kingâs College London on Monday, research from the universityâs Centre for Science and Security Studies (CSSS) suggests that using blockchain would help parties to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty build trust and make dismantling nuclear weapons more âsafe, secure and reliable.â
Titled âThe Trust Machine: Blockchain in Nuclear Disarmament and Arms Control Verification,â the policy report is aimed at providing policymakers a non-technical look at how blockchain technology could them conform to the requirements of nuclear disarmament verification.
Among the specific benefits the technology can offer for the dismantling data management process, the reportâs authors list âan immutable, encrypted record of chain-of-custody for treaty-accountable items,â allowing third parties to verify the disarmament without actually seeing the data.
Another is a âcryptographic escrowâ for national declarations allowing sensitive data to be released in a phased manner.
Also read: How the Bitcoin Blockchain Is Being Used to Safeguard Nuclear Power Stations
The team â led by CSSS Research Associate Dr. Lyndon Burford â further says blockchain could provide a secure data platform for location sensors and environmental monitors. This could enable real-time monitoring at remote sites, âautomatically alerting participants to potential treaty violations,â the report suggests.
With nations unwilling to expose sensitive data concerning nuclear weapons, Dr. Burford said governments âoften lack sufficient trust in each other to cooperate on such measures.â
The reportâs title reflects the possibility blockchain could be a tool to build that trust by offering an encrypted, tamperproof way to manage the data around warhead dismantling, according to the report.