Blockchain to track Congo's cobalt from mine to mobile
Send a link to a friend
[February 02, 2018]
By Barbara Lewis
LONDON (Reuters) - Blockchain is to be used
for the first time to try to track cobalt's journey from artisanal mines
in Democratic Republic of Congo through to products used in smartphones
and electric cars.
(For a graphic on how blockchain works click http://tmsnrt.rs/2dVefUN)
Sources close to a pilot scheme expected to be launched this year say
the aim is eventually to give manufacturers a way of ensuring the cobalt
in lithium-ion batteries for products such as iPhones and Teslas has not
been mined by children.
Tracking cobalt presents many challenges as scores of informal mine
sites would have to be monitored, all players in the supply chain would
need to buy into the scheme, and accurate, electronic data would need to
be transmitted from remote areas - all in a vast country plagued by
lawlessness.
But companies are under growing pressure from consumers and investors to
show the cobalt they use has come through supply chains free of rights
abuses, just as they have for minerals used in electronics such as
tantalum, tin, tungsten and gold.
Businesses in China, the main destination for Congolese cobalt from
artisanal mines, have set up a Responsible Cobalt Initiative, which has
been joined by tech giants such as Apple and Samsung, to address child
labor.
The problem they face is that there are few sure-fire ways of tracing
cobalt from the informal mines that produce up to a fifth of the cobalt
from Congo, the world's biggest producer.
"The demand to make cobalt more sustainable is going to continue
growing, meaning there is a will to find a solution and blockchain will
be part of that," said a source with the project, who declined to be
named because it is not yet public.
OPEN QUESTION
Blockchain technology is already used in the diamond industry. Gems are
given a digital fingerprint that is then tracked by blockchain as gems
are sold, giving a forgery-proof record of where the stones have come
from.
The cobalt supply chain is far more complex but the developers of the
pilot hope blockchain - a decentralized online database in the form of a
distributed ledger - can at least track some of the stages that are a
major worry for end users.
Sheila Warren, head of blockchain policy at the World Economic Forum,
said it was an open question how well it could work in Congo given the
prevalence of conflict, lawlessness and an opaque legal system.
"We are prototyping, iterating, testing, scaling," said Warren, who is
working with experts to see how blockchain can improve mineral supply
chains. "The technology is not the hard part."
Amnesty International, which detailed the extent of child labor in
cobalt mining in Congo in a 2016 report, said it was looking at
blockchain, especially with a view to tracing payments to middlemen.
"You have to be wary of technological solutions to problems that are
also political and economic, but blockchain may help. We're not against
it," said Amnesty researcher Mark Dummett.
Congo holds half the world's cobalt reserves and demand for the main
mineral component of lithium-ion batteries is set to surge as electric
cars proliferate. In 2016, Congo mined 54 percent of the 123,000 tonnes
of cobalt produced worldwide.
Carmakers such as Volkswagen are trying to secure long-term cobalt
supplies to sustain electric car production, and they are asking
suppliers to ensure no child labor was used in the supply chain.
BAGGED AND TAGGED
The plan for the Congo pilot scheme is to give each sealed bag of cobalt
produced by a vetted artisanal miner a digital tag which is entered on
blockchain using a mobile phone, along with details of the weight, date,
time and perhaps a photo.
[to top of second column] |
Part of Tilwizembe, a former industrial copper-cobalt mine now
occupied by artisanal miners, is seen outside Kolwezi, the capital
city of Lualaba Province in the south of Democratic Republic of
Congo, June 11, 2016. REUTERS/Aaron Ross/File Photo
At the next stage, a trader buying the bag would record the details on
blockchain, and the process would be repeated until the ore gets to the smelter
- leaving an immutable record of the cobalt's journey for downstream buyers or
third parties to view.
The pilot will involve organizations throughout the supply chain, from
on-the-ground monitors checking that sites are not using child labor, through
the refining process to end users, according to people helping to develop the
scheme.
One potential risk in the supply chain is that cobalt mined by children gets
mixed with "clean" cobalt before processing.
The industry is experimenting with options such as indelible marks that survive
the refining process, a mass balance approach as used for Fairtrade
certification of products such as cocoa, or bolting blockchain onto computer
technology already used by refiners to monitor material as it moves through
their plants.
"We are very bullish about the potential impact of blockchain in minerals and
metals supply chains," said Harrison Mitchell, director of RCS Global, which
advises companies on responsible sourcing and audits supply chains.
"Blockchain-enabled supply chains will have the ability to deliver trust and
transparency over the production of metals such as cobalt," he said. "Ensuring
that information from these mine sites is inputted correctly and transparently
is difficult, but it is possible."
INPUT DATA
Some institutional investors are also pushing mining companies and manufacturers
to harness blockchain to help clean up mineral supply chains.
Christine Chow of Hermes Investment Management said tracking cobalt was far more
complex than diamonds, typically involving 12 steps as opposed to five stages
for gems.
"But the principle of recording key characteristics and then entering them into
the blockchain, which is stored on the cloud, is the same," said Chow, part of
the Hermes EOS team that advises institutional shareholders on responsible
investing.
"To make it work, the key players in the chain must agree a set of input data to
define its features," said Chow, whose team has $425 billion of assets under
advice.
The International Council on Mining and Metals (ICMM) said its members, which
include all major mining companies, were well-placed to draw on blockchain's
potential to improve public trust in the industry.
"It does not solve the whole problem, but it solves a big part of the problem,"
ICMM CEO Tom Butler said.
"Quality at entry to where the blockchain starts remains a challenge, but in
that respect we're in a privileged position as ICMM members are mining
responsibly."
Glencore, the world's biggest producer of cobalt, declined to comment on the use
of blockchain.
In its 2016 sustainability report, Glencore said when it sourced cobalt in Congo
from outside its own production, it only dealt with third parties that did not
use artisanal mines.
(Editing by David Clarke)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|