Supply Chain Provenance with Blockchain
MTA
Traceability, Audits, and Building Trust Through Distributed Ledgers
2nd Edition
This book provides a pragmatic guide to implementing blockchain for supply chain provenance, moving beyond theoretical hype to focus on building tamper-evident, multi-enterprise systems. It argues that while blockchain provides an immutable ledger, true trust is only achieved by combining distributed ledgers with Internet of Things (IoT) sensing for physical-digital links, decentralized identity (DIDs) for actor verification, and smart contracts for automated compliance. The text details the architectural requirements for these systems, emphasizing "privacy by design" through selective disclosure and zero-knowledge proofs to protect commercial confidentiality while maintaining auditability.
The technical core of the book covers data modeling based on industry standards like GS1 EPCIS and the use of digital twins to provide real-time visibility into an asset's lifecycle. Addressing the "oracle problem," the author explains how to securely bring external real-world data onto the chain and highlights the necessity of "resilience engineering" to defend against security threats. To manage the high costs and low speeds of traditional blockchains, the book advocates for hybrid architectures that utilize Layer 2 scaling and off-chain storage strategies, where only cryptographic hashes of large data payloads are anchored to the ledger.
Recognizing that technology alone cannot solve supply chain opacity, the book dedicates significant attention to the "human element": governance models, consortium formation, and incentive design. It provides a roadmap for navigating complex legal and regulatory landscapes, such as GDPR and industry-specific mandates like the DSCSA. Detailed deployment playbooks offer a structured transition from limited pilots to production at scale, including integration strategies for existing ERP, MES, and WMS systems.
The final chapters provide a framework for financial justification through ROI modeling and TCO analysis, alongside guidance on vendor evaluation and RFP processes. The book concludes by looking toward a future where Artificial Intelligence enhances provenance through predictive analytics, and where verifiable data acts as the essential engine for sustainability and circular supply chains. Ultimately, the work serves as a comprehensive manual for professionals seeking to build verifiable, resilient, and ethically responsible global networks.
The book is intended for supply chain executives, program managers, architects, engineers, quality and compliance professionals, auditors, and sustainability leaders who need to design, implement, or oversee provenance initiatives. It assumes no prior blockchain expertise but expects readers to engage with both technical and organizational aspects of building trustworthy traceability systems. Professionals involved in sourcing, manufacturing, logistics, or certification will find actionable patterns, guardrails, and deployment guidance tailored to realâworld global supply chains.
April 7, 2026
48,829 words
3 hours 25 minutes
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