Top 4 Major Challenges For DLT, According to 200 Businessmen

Sead Fadilpašić
Last updated: | 4 min read

Four most pressing challenges facing distributed ledger technology (DLT) industry today are identified in the November 2019 paper on blockchain in trade, titled: “A Reality Check.”

Source: iStock/rzelich

The paper was written by Deepesh Patel, Editorial Director at Trade Finance Global (TFG), a trade finance platform, and Emmanuelle Ganne, Senior Analyst at the World Trade Organization (WTO), and it was endorsed by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC).

Based on a survey of more than 200 actors in the field, such as banks, corporates, fintech companies, and industry associations, the paper looks into the main projects underway in trade, and discusses the question of initiatives moving beyond a proof-of-concept, as well as “the challenges that these new actors now face as we go past the trough of disillusionment and exploratory phase of DLT in trade.”

It discusses four main challenges and their solutions in more detail.

1. Interoperability

  • 91% of respondents say DLT faces an interoperability challenge, while 53% of those indicate that it’s a big challenge;
  • 65% of respondents using or developing DLT said that choosing between various DLTs is a challenge their organization has been facing;
  • 86% of those using or developing DLT indicated integration into back office systems as a challenge for their firm.

Meanwhile, if networks can cooperate, then it:

  • allows DLT platforms to exist outside of isolation and benefit from the network effects fully, such as starting with early adopters, then reaching a critical mass followed by organic growth;
  • allows for a compounding of investments in the space as platforms and technology providers can pool their resources into dealing with the challenges that arise;
  • mitigates the challenge of choosing between DLTs, as operating on one network would progressively allow for transacting with parties on another;
  • plus, DLT networks should be made interoperable, not only with other networks and cutting-edge technology, but also with legacy backend systems.

In September, research firm Gartner also said that interoperability issues and other factors may stand in the way of financial companies that want to utilize blockchain, which would see only well-established public blockchain platforms or enterprise solutions having a chance of cornering the market until at least 2022. “We expect no more than four standards to lead the market in the next three to five years,” Fabio Chesini, Gartner’s senior research director, said back then.

2. Standardization

47% of respondents ranked the lack of standards as a big challenge, in 2nd place behind lack of legal clarity. Globalization leads to increased scale, which “without a degree of standardization, is a recipe for inefficiencies, particularly as the industry moves to become more digitized.”

While there’ve been a number of initiatives working on standardization, indicating greater recognition of the problem – such as blockchain-focused ISO/TC 307, ITU Working Group, and ICC DSI, or the WCO and UN/CEFACT that focus on the standardization of data models related to trade – inter-initiative harmonization is a must, while developing and maintaining a strong governance structure is key.

95% of respondents said legal clarity over ownership and jurisdiction of data and transactions is a challenge, with 65% of those saying it’s a big challenge.

“Navigating the legal environment seems to pose particular challenges for efforts towards trade digitization,” the paper says, with one such challenge being the lack of recognition of e-signatures and e-documents, despite the UN efforts. Furthermore, there is no computer or DLT algorithm that could determine if a transaction is a result of a legally enforceable contract. “There is nothing inherent about a DLT transaction that makes it legally binding,” says the paper. “This fact draws a sharp divide between the legally agnostic DLT utopia envisioned by some hype-curve riding enthusiasts and DLT reality.” Additionally, certain attempts at a solution have made DLT less secure.

4. Privacy challenges

“The core functionality of a blockchain, its immutability, seems to contradict with much of the growing global privacy legislation of today, such as […] the right to be forgotten,“ the paper states, as “the core of its value proposition, prevents data from being deleted.” This clashes with many countries’ legal requirements, but is an issue that is being addressed, the authors say.

The Commission Nationale de l’Informatique et des Libertés (CNIL), an independent French administrative regulator focused on privacy, collection, storage and use of personal data, suggested that the data processing and storing be done off-chain, while the data recorded on the blockchain should be a commitment only – “a hash generated by a keyed-hash function or a ciphertext obtained through “state of the art” algorithms and keys.”

The future of blockchain looks bright

Speaking about the widespread adoption of DLT within trade, 42% of respondents stated a positive outlook in five years’ time, but for the ten-year time frame, that percentage jumps to 73%.

A “collectively positive” perception of the state of the industry is seen at the 5-, 10-, 30-, and 50-year industry outlooks, says the paper, while the most positive one is the 10-year outlook, which could mean that the technology and its adoption will grow in the next decade. There is “a modest decline” through the 30- and 50-year views, gradually decreasing afterwards. “Perhaps this will be in light of the development of newer technology that could render DLT obsolete,” the paper concludes, stressing “the immense difficulty that exists in predicting what the next 50 years will hold.”

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Cryptonews.com talked to Ganne previously, and she said that “If we really want this [blockchain] technology to have an impact on the international trade and facilitate the international trade, we need to have this dialogue at the sectoral level. The good thing is that companies are starting to realize the importance of this dialogue.”