Canada Forges $130,000 Development Deal for Steel-Tracking Blockchain

The Canadian government has awarded enterprise blockchain startup Mavennet a procurement contract for the development of an on-chain steel-tracking platform.

Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada (ISED), a government agency with the mandate to foster technology innovation, published a procurement award on Nov. 12 that will fund the R&D project for six months with 169,427 CAD(about US$130,000).

The goal, as set out by ISED, is for Mavennet to build a blockchain proof-of-concept prototype that can track and share real-time data across the supply chain in the Canadian steel industry that regularly produces well over 10 million metric tons a year.

Mavennet’s CEO Patrick Mandic said in an interview that with a blockchain to trace live data points and AI to make those patterns meaningful, the system could have ripples across the multi-billion-dollar industry.

โ€œUltimately, youโ€™re collecting a lot of data with new levels of granularity,โ€ he said. โ€œIf youโ€™re able to collect information in real time and in a way that you can trust, youโ€™re opening up a world of possibilities for analysis and providing insights to the government,โ€ Mandic said.

If phase 1 proves successful, Mavennet may unlock additional two-year government funding of up to $800,000 to continue building a deployment-grade system.ย It’s already pursing similar government contracts around the world, including an oil-tracking platform for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

โ€œThe adoption of new digital technology into Canadian industry will help ensure our firms strengthen their competitive advantage,โ€ said Hans Parmar, a media relations manager for ISED.

Canadaโ€™s steel industry is a major international exporter, especially to the U.S. But that heavy reliance was rocked by President Trumpโ€™s 2018 steel tariffs and the ensuing market uncertainty. Last year, exports were down 22 percent.

Mandic said the tariffs provide a context for Canadaโ€™s search for a blockchain-based steel supply chain solution. Asserting that Trumpโ€™s decision was motivated in part by fears of tariff dodgers, who route their exports through untaxed markets, Mandic said blockchainโ€™s immutability can verify claims of product origin.ย 

โ€œWhat the blockchain provides is the ability to have a specific set of records in specific points of time,โ€ he said. โ€œYou cannot go back in time and change the path.โ€

ISEDโ€™s Parmar refuted the idea that the project was launched in response to the section 232 steel tariffs. But in a statement to CoinDesk he also explained the platform could have blockchain-specific benefits.ย 

โ€œThe technology solution may facilitate trade and domestic policy adjustments, including aligning country of origin marking regimes, certification and labelling if implemented,โ€ he said.

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