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- VeChain’s ecosystem, including tools like Cleanify and Carbonlarity, aims to improve traceability, calculate carbon emissions, and verify product authenticity.
- While no official collaboration has been announced, VeChain envisions Amazon adopting blockchain discreetly, starting with small pilots.
It seems that VeChain is hoping to revolutionize the Amazon supply chain by adding proof through blockchain technology to their business logistics. According to Sebastian, who is a VeChain ambassador, the system does not reveal the truth about emissions, product origin, or following circular economy rules, so VeChain is stepping in to fill this void.
How VeChain Can Help Amazon Via Blockchain Technology
Every year, Amazon ships 2.3 billion packages, Sebastian noted in his post for X. He added, “But where’s the public proof of emissions? Product origin? Circular claims? There isn’t any.” He argued that this isn’t a “crypto problem” but rather an infrastructure issue worth a trillion.
Many appreciate Amazon’s ability to run warehousing, fill orders, and ship them efficiently. Yet, even with its excellent logistics, the company is still reviewed for how transparent it is about ESG matters. “It still can’t tell you where your product really came from, how much carbon it produced, or whether it was sustainably made,” he noted.
The main proposal from the VeChain ambassador is to integrate a distributed proof layer onto Amazon’s existing tech stack. Cleanify, Carbonlarity, and EcoMeal are included in the VeChain ecosystem to help with quick traceability, calculating emissions, and preventing counterfeit products, as highlighted in the previous story.
A vision promoted by the blockchain company is to connect every product to a QR code that reveals the product’s data and how sustainable the product is. Sebastian declared,
VeChain doesn’t compete. It completes the system.
The post also touches on Amazon’s commitment to achieving net-zero carbon by 2040, expanding circular operations, and improving ESG transparency. According to Sebastian, VeChain’s blockchain system is vital for reaching those goals by insisting on “public, immutable, auditable proof” over the use of regular PDF reports.
VeChain constructed its platform using VET for value and VTHO for fees, which improves the stability that major platforms like Amazon might appreciate. APIs on the blockchain that can easily be mixed into a company’s environment let Web3 be added to applications without affecting how users operate them.
Is Amazon Using VeChain in the Backend?
Instead of a bold and surprising announcement, Sebastian proposes that Amazon may gradually use VeChain in the background. He claimed, “You won’t see fireworks. You’ll see one QR code on a product, one ESG pilot in logistics, one line in a press release.” However, there has been no official confirmation from either of the companies.
Meanwhile, the proposal further recommends ways to increase customer engagement. For instance, creating loyalty systems linked to ESG. The VeChain ambassador envisions a future when members of Amazon Prime can earn points for planet-friendly shopping, and these points are stored in their blockchain-based carbon wallets as an encouragement to buy in a sustainable way.
Sebastian finished his talk with a point about the true use of blockchain: “The real use case of blockchain was never finance. It was proof.” With regulations like MiCAR and SEC ESG rules coming in stronger worldwide, VeChain wants to act as the foundation for trust in digital supply chains.