SITA has launched a major industry research
project to explore the potential of blockchain.
More than 100 top
IT executives, attending SITA’s Customer Innovation Forum, were
the first to be invited to join the Aviation Blockchain Sandbox.
SITA is investing in the infrastructure to accelerate
industry-specific research into the viability of running
multi-enterprise apps using distributed ledger technology, more
commonly known as blockchain. The company is currently inviting interested
industry players to use the Aviation Blockchain Sandbox at no cost
to them.
Barbara Dalibard, CEO, SITA, said, “Today we are
inviting air transport organizations to work together so that we
can collectively see how blockchain could work across our
industry. Blockchain holds many promises but exploring these in
individual organizations is not the most productive. As the
technology company owned by airlines, SITA is in a position to
work neutrally with multiple stakeholders to explore and test
multi-enterprise applications. Through this collaborative
innovation we will accelerate the learning for all.”
The
airline industry has a long history of sharing information across
multiple stakeholders to increase efficiency. At times, however,
it faces difficulties when proprietary business information needs
to be extracted or multiple data sources conflict. One of the key
benefits of blockchain technology is the ability to have
multi-enterprise applications. These work across multiple
organizations locking data immutably into the blockchain rather
than having individual applications running separately and
exchanging data on a case-by-case basis. This is how this
technology can provide a ‘single source of truth’ to all
stakeholders.
The Aviation Blockchain Sandbox will be led
and managed by SITA Lab, SITA’s technology research team, and will
develop in three stages.
To start, SITA is opening the FlightChain
project to airlines and airports in September. FlightChain was
SITA’s blockchain trial, with British Airways, Heathrow, Geneva
Airport and Miami International Airport, using smart contracts for
shared control of data. It stored flight information on the blockchain to provide a single source of truth. Now SITA is making
it easy for other airlines and airports to join this research and
test FlightChain for their own use.
For the second stage of
this collaborative innovation, SITA will work with organizations
that wish to test smart contracts across a number of airline and
airport operational use cases. During the third stage of the
research, which is expected to start in late 2018, SITA will
enable participants to run their own node. This will give the
organizations the opportunity to become more involved and to participate in the running of the network, including becoming
custodians. Throughout all stages the participating organizations
can be assured that the data being used in the blockchain sandbox
will be stored confidentially.
“Since
we published the results of the FlightChain research, many of our
airline and airport customers have expressed an interest in
exploring the opportunities of blockchain with us and some have
already committed to the Aviation Blockchain Sandbox. We encourage
airlines, airports, ground handlers, governments and other
organizations with a role in the air transport industry to take
advantage of this opportunity to innovate together,” said Dalibard.
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