The Digital Feed Episode 2: Blockchain for a More Transparent Food Chain

Gandhar Desai
UNDP Global Centre Singapore
2 min readOct 22, 2020

Blockchain is finding many applications in making global value chains more efficient and sustainable. In the previous episode of The Digital Feed, we explored the application of blockchain for enabling traceability and preventing food fraud. In this episode, we took a step back to take a wider look at the technology itself, its potential, and what governments need to do to scale its adoption.

To understand the basics of blockchain, we interviewed David Lee, Professor at the Singapore University of Social Sciences, and Karen Teoh, COO and Co-founder of Kommerce, a fintech startup that uses blockchain to enable African businesses to access capital markets.

Access to trustworthy information can help finance become more accessible and affordable, especially for businesses in emerging markets. Highlighting the lack of transparency and frequent cases of cheating in agricultural commodities trading, Teoh remarked that “banks are not incentivised to offer a lower interest rate even to clients who pay back on time”, adding that it’s the end consumers in the developing world who end up paying more for their calories.

Blockchain makes information more accessible to stakeholders, thereby increasing trust among them and helping lower lending rates to businesses. Moreover, it lowers the cost of retrieving trustworthy information in case of a dispute. According to Prof. Lee, this acts as an incentive for stakeholders to act in a way that’s good for the entire ecosystem and has important implications for reducing food wastage, cost of insurance as well as lending rates.

On the question of how governments can help scale adoption of blockchain, both Teoh and Prof. Lee stressed on the importance of developing digital infrastructure, including internet connectivity, standards for interoperability in blockchain and allied technologies, and portable IDs which can be trusted worldwide. Prof. Lee added that international organisations like UNDP can help flatten the “learning curve” for countries by initiating dialogues on interoperability and global standards.

Watch the rest of the interview here. Blockchain is only one of the emerging technologies disrupting the foodtech space. We’ll be releasing the next episode on 2nd November in which we’ll explore the investment landscape for foodtech and agritech. Subscribe to our YouTube channel to keep updated on the latest episodes.

If you prefer to listen to an audio-only version of these episodes, check out our podcast channel on Spotify here.

Stay tuned and write to us at registry.sg@undp.org if you’d like to partner with us on our agritech initiatives!

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