On November 18, the Blockchain solutions provider launched a blockchain-based agricultural crop tracking network called Trace Harvest - and one of the largest companies in the world, Bayer, comes from Among its first users.

According to the Queen Telegraph, Trace Harvest is said to provide users with the ability to track the life cycle of agricultural products from the source of the seeds, all the way to defining the responsibilities of each party involved in the supply chain . The platform also provides users with real-time information, which perfectly reduces the issues associated with manually tracking crops.

Trace Harvest is open to all participants in the supply chain such as farmers, dealers, manufacturers, distributors and technology providers, and also aims to provide farmers with the opportunity to enter new markets and generate additional income.

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In addition to tracking crops, the platform can be used to protect the environment and protect the consumer - for example, carbon offset credits and food safety recalls. In addition, the company hopes that the data stored on the platform will be used by researchers to make the food supply chain more sustainable.

BlockApps has teamed up with Bayer CropScience on this project, a subsidiary of the German pharmaceutical giant Bayer. Bayer helped develop the network, and has been using it for the past two years in customer operations in the United States and Brazil to track soybean and corn crops, as well as many other crops.

BlockApps CEO and CEO Keren James Lupine commented on the launch, saying: Blockchain technology has already revolutionized the agricultural industry, and thanks to our partnership with Bayer, We are pioneers in this field. Together, we have succeeded in making this concept a reality.

Recently, many countries and companies have also moved to blockchain adoption in their crop-related supply chains. In October, the world's leading agribusiness companies from the United States, France, China and the Netherlands launched a joint venture that will use blockchain technology to streamline logistics operations in Brazil's agricultural sector.

Likewise, in September, Stephen Marshall, Prime Minister of South Australia, launched a blockchain-based INTEREST project with the primary goal of protecting the wine and dairy industries from fake fraud in global markets. Achieving efficiency savings across agricultural sectors.