Share this article

IBM and Maersk Abandon Ship on TradeLens Logistics Blockchain

An enterprise blockchain project from bygone bear markets will wind down after five years.

Updated May 9, 2023, 4:03 a.m. Published Nov 30, 2022, 2:35 a.m.
jwp-player-placeholder

Maersk and IBM will wind down their shipping blockchain TradeLens by early 2023, ending the pair’s five-year project to improve global trade by connecting supply chains on a permissioned blockchain.

TradeLens emerged during the “enterprise blockchain” era of 2018 as a high-flying effort to make inter-corporate trade more efficient. Open to shipping and freight operators, its members could validate the transaction of goods as recorded on a transparent digital ledger.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters

The idea was to save its member-shipping companies money by connecting their world. But the network was only as strong as its participants; despite some early wins, TradeLens ultimately failed to catch on with a critical mass of its target industry.

“TradeLens has not reached the level of commercial viability necessary to continue work and meet the financial expectations as an independent business,” Maersk Head of Business Platforms Rotem Hershko said in a statement.

More For You

More For You

The Genius Act ripple effect: Sui executives say institutional demand has never been higher

Stephen Mackintosh, chief investment officer of Sui Group Holdings, and Evan Cheng, CEO of Mysten Labs at Consensus Hong Kong 2026 (CoinDesk)

Evan Cheng and Stephen Mackintosh said 2025 marked a turning point for institutional adoption, with tokenization and agentic commerce emerging as the next frontier.

What to know:

  • Executives cited ETF flows, DAT growth and major trading firms entering crypto.
  • Tokenization and instant settlement could blur the line between traditional and decentralized markets.
  • Low-latency design and composable tooling aim to power AI-driven and tokenized financial use cases.