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Trucks passing through containers at the Hong Kong Container Terminal, situated in the Kwai Chung-Tsing Yi basin on May 17, 2019. Photo: SCMP / Roy Issa

A CBDC trial in Hong Kong could finally enable blockchain to digitise shipping, with help from Ant Group

  • Hong Kong’s Global Shipping Business Network has finished a prototype of its first electronic bill of lading in collaboration with Ant’s ZAN blockchain unit
  • The product is part of Hong Kong’s wholesale central bank digital currency project and aims to digitise a process that has been paper-based for centuries
Blockchain
With the recent launch of its first prototype product in collaboration with fintech giant Ant Group, Hong Kong-based Global Shipping Business Network (GSBN) aims to prove that blockchain can fully digitise a critical process in the shipping industry that has remained stubbornly paper-based for centuries.
GSBN – a non-profit consortium whose shareholders include shipping industry stakeholders such as Cosco Shipping, Hapag-Lloyd and OOCL – last week finished a prototype electronic bill of lading (eBL) to be used as part of Hong Kong’s wholesale central bank digital currency (wCBDC) project, CEO Bertrand Chen told the Post in an interview on March 13.
Since its founding in April 2021, GSBN has been on a mission to use blockchain to digitally transform the global shipping industry and bring it into the 21st century. That effort received a big boost when the Hong Kong Monetary Authority named eBL as one of the six use cases in its wCBDC sandbox Project Ensemble launched earlier this month.

“I think right now in the world, there’s probably only two locations where the regulators somewhat have a plan or vision of how to do this right,” Chen said. “And I think it’s Hong Kong and Dubai.”

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Hong Kong’s position as a maritime centre and financial hub, along with policy support for blockchain and virtual assets, makes it uniquely placed to embrace this opportunity, according to the executive.

The eBL prototype is already being used in the wCBDC project, according to Ant Group’s ZAN, the blockchain GSBN uses for the product. GSBN struck the partnership last November with Ant, an affiliate of Alibaba Group Holding, owner of the South China Morning Post.

The other use cases the HKMA is exploring with the new project are green bonds, carbon credits, aircraft, electric vehicle charging stations and treasury management. Hong Kong’s de facto central bank has not publicly shared any details of those use cases.

The shipping industry is particularly ripe for disruption, though. The bill of lading, a document that confers the right to take possession of cargo, has been paper-based since the Middle Ages. It serves as a title to the goods and is required to receive payment. While the industry has sought a solution to digitise the document for many years, no industry-wide standards have been developed.

Blockchain could address weaknesses in earlier systems, as it can be used for digital signatures and proof of ownership, with tracking of goods baked in.

This solution has yet to catch on. Only 2 per cent of bills of lading are digitised today, according to Chen. Global shipping giants target full digitisation by 2030, but change has been slow in the face of complicated challenges that include different legal regimes, Chen said.

Global Shipping Business Network CEO Bertrand Chen sees room for his organisation’s blockchain to become a standard in cross-border logistics since Maersk and IBM ended TradeLens. Photo: Handout
Under Project Ensemble, eBLs issued through GSBN are wrapped on the ZAN blockchain and payments will be made with Hong Kong’s pilot e-HKD. Apart from simplifying the shipping process, a tokenised bill of lading also creates new possibilities for trade financing, according to Chen.

In a video explaining how this might work, ZAN uses the example of a buyer looking for financing. The seller could transfer control of the eBL to a third party such as a bank, which can appraise the goods and create a tradeable token. Traders can then buy those tokens and realise a return on that investment when the original buyer pays back the seller, according to the video posted to LinkedIn.

Tokenisation thus allows for “more complicated scenarios for payment”, and lets sellers get paid faster and easier, Chen said.

“All those new scenarios are possible, and it wasn’t possible in the past,” he added. “It’s a tangible use case.”

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GSBN is not directly part of the wCBDC sandbox, which it is involved in through its Ant partnership. However, the company has been pushing for eBL adoption through other efforts.

Since issuing its first eBL in January 2023, the company’s volume surpassed 120,000 by the end of the year, Chen said. GSBN hopes to grow that to 200,000 this year, he added.

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