Towards the end of last month, Walmart announced

that it was partnering with VeChain to develop the “Walmart China Blockchain

Traceability Platform.” The platform is intended to enhance the traceability of

products such as rice, fresh meat, and mushrooms, among others.

According to reports:

“By scanning the desired products, customers can acquire detailed information, including the source of the scanned products and geographic location received by Walmart, logistics process, product inspection report, and many more data points. Data collection and data availability are to be continually added to the scale of the platform and its use of blockchain technology.”

FromVechain To A Physical Warehouse

Apart from partnering with VeChain, Walmart is taking food safety to another level by investing heavily into logistics; Walmart will therefore invest $1 billion in China logistics.

As per SupplyChainDive, a news outlet:

“[Walmart’s] 1 million-square-foot warehouse in Dongguan, China, is part of 8 billion yuan ($1.16 billion) Walmart plans to invest in logistics in China. The facility is outfitted for fresh, frozen, and ambient storage.”

Notably, another warehouse built by Walmart in

Huanan, China, opened in March this year and is reportedly serving over 100

stores “in the Guangdong and Guangxi regions and can ship up to 165,000 boxes

per day.”

However, Walmart’s current investment of

approximately more than $1 billion is the heaviest since it entered the Chinese

market more than 20 years ago. From the onset, Walmart is banking on the

competitive Chinese grocery market with shoppers turning to online stores for

their grocery.

To cater to the demand, Walmart joined hands with JD.com three years ago to improve food delivery in China. As per the agreement between the two leading stores, Walmart would handle the back-end of orders made on JD.com’s front-end.

The news outlet noted that:

“Walmart emphasized the technology in the new facilities that will ensure the different storage temperatures remain constant.”

Although the current investment is Walmart’s most significant, the store seeks to build roughly over 10 more warehouses in a span of 10 to 20 years to serve the burgeoning grocery market in China.

Warehouse,Blockchain, Crypto

Notably, Walmart’s investment in logistics has overflown into blockchain, and the crypto community is optimistic this will bring good tidings. For instance, cpres10, a Redditor, commented:

“This is awesome for crypto. They are using the blockchain as their backbone. No more dept. etc. All email/checks/deposits/ everything a comp does is in blockchain. Now add money to that backbone!”

More stores are turning to blockchain for product verification. For example, Rakuten, one of the leading e-commerce stores in Japan, partnered with Techrock to curb counterfeits.

WalmartIs Not Alone

Ye Jianyou, Rakuten’s vice senior manager, said that:

“Together with Techrock, we can further develop blockchain traceability and work towards cross-ecosystem integration of our platforms’ loyalty points.”

As these e-commerce giants invest in

blockchain technology for product tracing solutions, the crypto community hopes

that “some of that money will flow into crypto.”

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