Rastrar.com uses blockchain to trace food

The project was developed by the Peruvian blockchain platform Stamping.io. The pilot program is tracking boxes of lemons that will arrive in Santiago de Chile

A group of entrepreneurs is using blockchain technology to identify and track the path of lemons from their production of origin in Peru to their destination in Chile. The Rastrar.com platform launched a pilot program to track some native Peruvian food.

The solution was developed by Stamping.io, a Peruvian application for recording assets and digital evidence in the blockchain. The Rastrar pilot program will begin with the traceability of foods such as lemons, red onions, corn, yucca and “chicha morada”.

However, the design of the solution is prepared to follow the traceability of any agricultural, livestock, industrial or even pharmaceutical product.

Every export product will carry a QR code so that the buyer can identify its originality. In addition, it will include its production date to determine its degree of maturity and quality.

The tool will allow distributing and exporting companies to easily identify which supplier each product belongs to in case of detecting any error. Also, all actors in the supply chain such as transport, planting, export, customs and import must update the data on the platform.

The data is recorded in Stamping.io and asymmetrically encrypted using the producer’s key. In addition, the information is recorded in evidenChain, LACChain, the Blockchain of the Inter-American Development Bank, bitcoin and ethereum.

L.Saenz

Source: Diario Bitcoin

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