The U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) plans to evaluate its foray into blockchain technology by the end of the year.
Members of a government advisory group, the Commercial Customs Operations Advisory Committee (COAC), met on October 3 to advocate for regulatory reform around different trade-focused areas, with âemerging technologiesâ coming up as a point of conversation.
In particular, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) representatives said the agency has concluded its latest round of testing blockchain technology for supply chain management, according to a press release published Tuesday.
CBP is working to determine if a blockchain-based platform can streamline the agencyâs efforts to track shipments around the world as part of the soon-to-be-replaced North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA), as previously reported.
Celeste Catano, global product manager at BluJay Solutions, a supply chain software company working with the agency, said CBP is currently evaluating its proposed use of blockchain technology, adding that âwe hope to have some recommendations by the December meeting.â
âWe just completed our testing last week on the blockchain solution for NAFTA and CAFTA verifications,â Catano told the meetingâs attendees.
Members of the project met after last weekâs meeting to assess the test, including what can be improved and whether blockchain âis ⦠the right technology for these types of projects,â she said.
CBP is one of a number of U.S. agencies looking at possible applications of blockchain, having detailed its âlive fireâ testing in August.
Vincent Annunziato, director of the CBPâs Automated Commercial Environment Business Office, explained during the October meeting that the agency is currently in the âproof-of-conceptâ phase, adding:
âWeâve produced a hybrid system that allows public sharing of data and also maintains the security of that data. Itâs particularly important for keeping trade secrets and thatâs what this architecture is designed to do.â
That being said, the agency is proceeding cautiously and is only looking to provide a small level of funding at the moment.
âIf we find something that doesnât work, we donât invest anymore. If we find that it does work, then we move forward with confidence. This is new ground for us, so itâs exciting,â he said.
Shipping image via Shutterstock