Submitted
Financial Inclusion Challenge

Sustafy—Origin Supply Chain Data at Scale

Team Leader
Scott Frankum
Solution Overview & Team Lead Details
Our Organization
The Jaipur Crafts Festival
What is the name of your solution?
Sustafy—Origin Supply Chain Data at Scale
Provide a one-line summary of your solution.
We document origin supply chain data, obtain Digital Product Passports, surmount new EU trade barriers and activate the genius of 2 billion smallholder making and farming families by driving transaction costs towards zero on a Holochain UI/hAPP
Film your elevator pitch.
What specific problem are you solving?

Problem

The presenting problem is many creators of the world's most beautiful and delicious things export to the European Union. As early as March 30th, 2024—a new European Union "Eco Design for Sustainable Products Regulation", requires Digital Product Passports for any products entering the EU excepting pharmaceuticals, animal feeds and food. Digital Product Passports (DPPs) are issued by GS1 and require documentation for a product's supply chain, circularity, sustainability and marketing claims.  

India exports 36% of its craft output to the European Union, so there is urgency. We'll begin in India because we know a lot about the Indian craft sector. Making the project work with India's challenges around literacy, language, digital divide and price tolerance should smooth project adoption for growers of raw materials and creators of handmades globally.

Multi-Stage Rollout

This is a multi-stage project that can be built in "chunks", starting with a legislative requirement for transparent supply chains, circularity data and verified marketing claims. Transparency will change consumers.

The Big Idea

The big idea relies on network effects of a new, P2P value-innovated, blockchain-like technology that drives transaction costs to almost zero.  Very low transaction costs could bring 2 billion smallholders into the formal economy.   Activated smallholders with the same tools as the global north will change markets. 

Until now, technology choices were conventional tech or blockchain. There are solid competitors in the space that focus on global north issues of customers or compliance. However, blockchain may never be simple, cheap, reliable or flexible enough for origin growers and makers. Blockchain works for top-down applications in the developed world but breaks in the developing world, mostly because of high transaction costs. If we exclude smallholders, the ambition won't fulfill the promise of policy regulations or the scope of climate challenges.

European Union Policy and Strategy

The European Commission claims that digitized supply chains are the foundation of their "twin transitions" to sustainable economies and carbon neutrality. Preferring bottom-up supply chain transparency would generate robust, real-time climate and economic data sets from those best positioned to act on food security, regenerative agriculture and climate resilience. "Paying" smallholders in free, Web3 services for origin supply chain data, SDGs and other desirable policy goals support the global south to remediate shared concerns. 

When consumers and suppliers both have more structural power, market forces could flip into healthier capitalism.  In Porter's terms—when makers and consumers both have stronger bargaining power—higher rivalry decentralizes power and transfers value away from the center. Freer, fairer capitalism might even be a counterweight to rising authoritarianism.

Other Support for Transparent Supply Chains

Until February 2022, EU regulations were focused on long-declared climate goals. Muscular updates in March 2022 respond to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, a newly swaggering China, and the pandemic. Collectively, these forces pushed Western countries into defensive postures that de-link from full globalization. Increasingly, the West regards material and energy supply chains as vital to economic policy and national security. Transparent supply chains are the sea change.

What is your solution?

We document origin supply chain data, obtain Digital Product Passports, surmount new EU trade barriers and activate the genius of 2 billion smallholder making and farming families by driving transaction costs towards zero on a Holochain UI/hAPP.

Differentiation

We differ from current alternatives in ambition, technology, strategy and other ways that matter. We're building on Holochain, a new Web3 tech which has the best features of blockchain without the high costs and problems of scale.  Holochain is cheap, powerful, fast, private and built for developing countries. It features baked-in ethics along with new, Web3 services like: smart contracts and data roll-ups.

Legacy competitors approach Digital Product Passports, mostly, from the top-down and use conventional or blockchain tech that won't reach down into the bottom 2 billion. Top-down methods use estimates and approximation. Competitors seem satisfied to meet the letter of the new regulations without reaching for new Web3 possibilities— even though bottom-up documentation converts sustainability into operational actions.

First Results

We expect the first pilot's proof-of-concept results in July. The Phase One deliverable writes and demos Open-Source-code to trace silk from farmer > transport > dyer > weaver > transport > tailor > customer.  A unique, cryptographic number documents the supply chain from origin raw materials to finished goods, with visual trackability and traceability. We hope to include circularity data like water usage, transportation energy use, the creator's family size and quality-of-life dimensions. We also hope to include at least one smallholder service. We'll create early audiences and money to pay for code development with a Kickstarter that sells documented silk jackets.

A second, more capable pilot collects and passes origin supply chain data of raw wool and woven wool cloth yardage, acquires the DPP number and follows goods from our Indian cooperative partner to EU customers. The large maker pool will verify that the technology is fit-for-use in rural communities of developing countries.

About the Technology

Holochain and hREA reached viability in February 2023. There are sixteen medium-to-large-ambition projects on Beta v0.1.0. Over 1000 developers are trained and ready to build on the platform.

Applications create self-owned identities and encrypted peer-to-peer networks between you and other users—on your own device. Not depending on data centers is already a win in terms of energy use, carbon footprint, speed, privacy and services delivered to rural craft clusters. 

Sustafy's UI is based on Resources, Events, Agents (REA). REA is an ISO accepted flow-state accounting system and supply chain documentation methodology. REA is expressed as Resource Description Framework (RDF), which is the standard Web3 data interoperability model that lets different platforms "talk" to each other for harmonized data sets.

We'll document the distributed economic networks with ValueFlowsOpen Source modules magnify the freedom to use, study, modify and share copies of the software to grow the capabilities fast. Success brings everyone in.

Who does your solution serve, and in what ways will the solution impact their lives?

The Audience

We began the Sustafy project for India's 200 million makers. Over the four years we have been waiting for Holochain's maturity and thinking through how to help, we realized the need for a bigger vision that includes the world's 2 billion smallholders. The new EU regulations are the shock that moved us into action.

Digital Product Passports

The European Commission is reaching for a Green and Digital future.  The stated policy is that digitized supply chains, supported by Digital Product Passports (DPPs), are the eyes that unlock self-reinforcing "Twin Transitions" of sustainable economies and a carbon/climate-neutral single market by 2050. The EU has pretty good reasons for moving forward even though Digital Product Passports are a trade barrier that, in the case of India's makers, could be an extinction event.  Smallholders need a low-transaction-cost scale solution. Sustafy could be that solution.

The Vision

What if technology were cheap, powerful and pervasive enough to bring the global north’s tools to 2 billion smallholders who create the world’s most beautiful and delicious things? These tools would have the potential to activate the ignored bottom 25% in accessing new markets, finance, land security, bargaining power, cooperatives, greater inclusion, equity and other services academics say they need. For the first time, intelligence and opportunity would be uniformly distributed.  Over time, smallholders could join the formal economy and begin to agitate for more of the pie for themselves and others at the bottom of the value chain.

The Services Smallholders Need to Rise

Smallholders can't rise without the same tools as the global north and very low transaction costs to access goods and services.  High transaction costs, like those of blockchain, limit smallholder market participation. Smallholders need:

Access to Services

  • Transparent, secure, direct transactions eliminating intermediaries and reducing the risk of exploitation
  • Improved market access
  • Direct connections to buyers that bypasses intermediaries
  • Higher selling prices that arise from transparency/traceability on origin, quality and impact
  • Smart Contracts that automate administrative tasks and ensure timely payments

Access to Finance

  • Peer-to-peer lending, microfinancing, insurance and investment opportunities
  • Real-time visibility into their inventory for lower spoilage and theft
  • Documentation of land ownership, production history, and creditworthiness
  • Data sharing and stakeholder collaboration farmers, researchers, suppliers, and buyers

 

How are you and your team well-positioned to deliver this solution?

We need to serve consumers, smallholders and regulated firms equally. 

Makers

Sustafy is a project of The Jaipur Crafts Festival, which touches 13000+ maker lives and unifies 7000+ sustainable, fair trade, craft and social enterprises in 558+ countries, territories and villages. We focus on long-term projects in neglected areas like strategy, technology, data, urban planning and market development. Everything we do activates a differentiation strategy to repair broken markets. Aiming for the level of causation brings the potential for change-making at scale. 

The festivals support ongoing structural analysis of Indian crafts, which points towards the need for a crafts differentiation strategy with a matrix of long-term projects that emerge through high-impact events. We informentertain and connect stakeholders of Indian handmades with new thinking on the business of crafts, culture and heritage.

Consumers

Sustainability consumers are everywhere.  However, they don't have complete information or a path to action. Engaging consumers to see the impact and real value of the things we buy and use every day—untied from marketing and branding—is transformational. Transparency, traceability and realigned incentives are likely to power countless, new, positive consumer choices and drive different consumption patterns. For example, a 2017 study reports 76% of consumers will refuse to purchase a product if they learn it was not made ethically. When incentives are aligned—the ethical behavior you want—is rewarded.  When unethical behavior is punished by consumers, over time there is less of it.

Field Work

We spent a month in Indore helping a women's empowerment network with a garment initiative. We gained first-hand experiences overcoming issues around language, literacy, culture and digital divide.  BBC Media Action, which works on bringing women into the technology mainstream, confirmed the approach we will use in training and rollout. We spent two months in Kolkata and Murshidabad talking to over 25 designers, retailers, educators, creators and origin makers to trace supply chains for cotton, silk and wool from source to store. We are in frequent contact with brands, academics and makers for ongoing projects. 

Current Events and Recognition of Supply Chain Work


Which dimension of the Challenge does your solution most closely address?
  • Other
In what city, town, or region is your solution team headquartered?
International | USA | India
In what country is your solution team headquartered?
  • United States
What is your solution’s stage of development?
  • Pilot: An organization testing a product, service, or business model with a small number of users
How many people does your solution currently serve?

Zero now.  In July, there will be a chunk of Open-Source code to document natural silk from its origins. Fast-following, there will be code chunks to document other sustainable raw materials like cotton, wool and mixed fabrics. Open-Source code could serve many makers quickly.

We're partnering with one of India's well-regarded craft cooperatives of 12,000 nomadic and pastoral peoples.  This tranche of work qualifys raw wool, weaving and origin data collection for Digital Product Passports that maintain trade flows by getting goods over the EU border.


Why are you applying to Solve?

Extractive capitalism is not permitted under the Holochain software license. Venture money and the demands of maximizing shareholder value would kill the project's promise. Consequently, our revenue, investment and growth models are likely to be unconventional. 

Projections

We expect that build-out costs will lead revenue until there is scale. But, there are non-profits all over the world that would see this as part of their mission.  Roll-out may not have the same costs, challenges and money requirements as, say, Uber did.  We need help with projections.

Technology

Building services brick by brick, chunk by chunk is still valid although being able to obtain Digital Product Passports for origin products in time for the deadline is desirable. We will have marketing, technology, training, revenue, culture and data feed challenges for sure.  We need help to make sure a fully functional smallholder service is available in time for the EU deadlines.

Training

We're solid for first stages in India, but there are very organized NGOs and governance firms in every making country.  We could use introductions which, over time, could facilitate services to smallholders who want them.  Subsequently, there are opportunities for community credit swap "banks" and raw materials cooperatives that could arise out of broader adoption.  We could use help imagining services tailored to local needs.

Communications

This is a bigger and more international COMMS project than anything any of us have done before.  We could use help with a communications plan for smallholders in each maker country.  We could use support for communications to consumers and regulated companies who will build the revenue model. That likely includes high-level advice and possibly PR services.

Data Feeds

We need strategic thinking about who gets to see quarantined data and who doesn't. Your partners will have experience to work through the practical and ethical challenges of what could become the world's most robust climate and economic data sets. We could also use advice on how to provide regulated firms with what they need for full EU compliance. There are at least thirteen buckets of supply chain regulation under consideration, including the New York Textile Act and the congressional Fabric Act.  We could use public policy advice about how to be ready on the USA side.

Legal

The IP is in an LLC.  We need legal knowledge about the global footprint and in-country operations.

Future-Proofing

Part of the task is what others will need If we're successful.  For example, do transparent products still need audited designations like "Certified Organic"? Do ESG departments need to continue the kinds of money and direct services they supply to smallholder and climate causes?  Or, are there higher and better uses for the resources of engaged firms?

There are strategy, competitiveness and GPD dimensions too. If marketing is a lynchpin of a firm's sustainable competitive advantage, where do they go when products de-link from marketing? A lot of companies will need a re-think.  We need help ideating how to help MSMEs and larger firms prepare for the transition.

In which of the following areas do you most need partners or support?
  • Legal or Regulatory Matters
  • Product / Service Distribution (e.g. delivery, logistics, expanding client base)
  • Public Relations (e.g. branding/marketing strategy, social and global media)
  • Technology (e.g. software or hardware, web development/design)
Who is the Team Lead for your solution?
Scott Frankum
More About Your Solution
Your Team
Your Business Model & Funding
Solution Team:
Scott Frankum
Scott Frankum
Founder