Among the 400 customers, 63 projects are based on individual needs. Furthermore, 25 companies are working in global trade, 14 companies in food tracking, and 14 companies in global payments. Visa and HSBC are the two major financial institutions with which IBM is working on blockchain projects.
According to Business Insider, last year, IBM and Walmart have already launched a global joint food safety blockchain project, which enables the latter to figure out where specific produce originated in a matter of seconds.
IBM’s software is built on top of an open-source blockchain called Hyperledger Fabric and uses “permissioned networks.” This means all data can be accessed only using password or other security mechanism.
IBM’s blockchain clients includes Maersk, Du Pont, Dow Chemical, Walmart, Nestlé, Kroger and Unilever, Visa, KlickEx, EarthPort, Nab, BBVA and CIBC, Societe General, WeTrade, HSBC, Unicredit, and Santander.
Earlier this year, Jim Kavanaugh, IBM chief financial officer, said
“For us, blockchain is a set of technologies that allow our clients to simplify complex, end-to-end processes in a way that couldn’t have been done before.”
In February, Agility, a global logistics provider joined hands with Maersk and IBM to provide secure and efficient methods to track container shipments using blockchain technology. Earlier this month, Pacific International Lines (Pte) Ltd., and IBM Singapore completed a trial of blockchain based cargo supply chain tracking system. Furthermore, in China, Walmart, JD.com, IBM, and Tsinghua University are collaborating to improve food tracking and safety. The four established the Blockchain Food Safety Alliance in December.