Key Takeaways:
- Ripple and Mercy Corps Ventures use the XRP Ledger to bring blockchain traceability to 300 Colombian smallholder farmers.
- The initiative tackles barriers to credit and sustainability in rural agriculture through digital records and deferred payment models.
- With 46% female participation, the pilot surpasses national averages, promoting inclusive economic empowerment.
Ripple Impact, in partnership with the Colombian agricultural technology company WËIA and Mercy Corps Ventures, has rolled out a pioneering blockchain pilot that is designed to increase the incomes and financial inclusion of smallholder farmers in Colombia.
This is part of Ripple’s Unlocking Opportunity initiative and uses the XRP Ledger (XRPL) to facilitate immutable traceability and transparent accounting in agricultural value chains. It reaches 300 farmers, processing 240 tons of unrefined whole cane sugar on a monthly basis.
The agricultural sector in Colombia is hindered by massive barriers: more than 86% of small-scale farmers are informally operating, without credit histories and transactional books needed for obtaining loans or formal financial products.
Thus, 79% of rural residents are left out of the credit lines, with many farmers collecting just 70% of the bare minimum living wages, reinforcing poverty traps.
Ripple blockchain traceability ensures agricultural transparency
The initiative deploys WËIA’s blockchain traceability platform built on the XRP Ledger to create verifiable and immutable records of agricultural products from planting to harvest, accessed via QR codes.
This system addresses food fraud, a worldwide problem impacting as much as 10% of the food supply, with a cost of around $50 billion every year, by creating transparency for buyers and end users in relation to claims of sustainability.
It promotes direct farmer-market connections with suppliers of inputs and buyers of produce in the bid to stabilize incomes and improve relationships along the supply chain.
One of the notable innovations is the “Farm Now, Pay Later” (FNPL) model, supported by traceability data, that enables farmers to receive agricultural inputs in a timely manner and delay payment until harvesting. This financial flexibility is critical for informal farmers who otherwise struggle to secure credit.
Pilot Goals, Inclusivity, and Future Impact
Out of the 300 farmers involved, 46% are females, a higher percentage compared with the country’s overall average of 26%, highlighting the initiative’s gender-inclusion drive.
The pilot will quantify growth in product value linked with confirmed sustainability metrics, improved retailer satisfaction by transparent reports, and formal business contract growth in terms of forward agreements.
Through its demonstration of blockchain applications in agriculture, the pilot creates new avenues for financial inclusion and improvement of farmer livelihoods, as well as improving compliance with international standards of sustainability.
The project also has potential for use as a replicable model for agricultural communities around the world, driving financial inclusion and sustainable economic growth with blockchain technology.
Related Reading | FTX Recovery Trust Begins $5 Billion Distribution May 30