British-Swiss commodity trading and mining company Glencore volition use an IBM-developed blockchain solution to track cobalt.

In a press release issued on Dec. 12, Glencore confirmed it had joined the Responsible Sourcing Blockchain Network (RSBN), a joint partnership between various major corporations leveraging the technology to improve supply chain transparency.

Glencore: blockchain aids good practice

RSBN is the brainchild of global sourcing audit and informational RCS Global Group. It uses the IBM Blockchain platform and is powered past Hyperledger Fabric.

"RSBN plays a key office in advancing the sustainable partnership between the producers of commodities that will enable the transition to a low-carbon economy and key consumers effectually the world," Nico Paraskevas, Glencore head of marketing for copper and cobalt, commented in the press release.

Blockchain becomes metals industry favorite

Glencore has shown interest in blockchain before. As Cointelegraph reported, in October the business firm was one of seven metals giants to form the Mining and Metals Blockchain Initiative, aiming to collaborate on proof-of-concept solutions going frontwards.

More than broadly, the metals industry is keen on promoting blockchain to boost its supply chain efficiency. In March, the London Metals Exchange (LME) reportedly backed a similar international initiative focusing on the engineering science.

"You know where your metal is, you have proof of your metal, but nobody tin can encounter what your metal is and where your metal is," LME master executive, Matt Chamberlain, said at the time.