Volvo Group has tested a proprietary digital asset on a closed blockchain network designed for transactions among material suppliers, transport companies and its own logistics operations.
The internal proof of concept was disclosed by Ivan Branco, head of information management, AI and analytics for Volvo Group’s logistics operations in Belgium. The company created the token for a specific supplier-payment experiment rather than a public launch, exchange listing or investment product.
The project remains at the exploration stage and has not been industrialized. Volvo has not named the blockchain architecture, disclosed token economics or said whether the asset represented fiat value, internal credit or another form of settlement claim.
Shared Ledger Targets Payments and Compliance
The closed-network model would give approved participants a shared record of orders, transportation events and payments. Material suppliers, logistics providers and Volvo currently operate across separate systems, creating reconciliation work when records differ or information arrives late.
A proprietary settlement asset could link payment activity to the same ledger used for shipment and order data. The design would remain inside a permissioned commercial network, separating it from public cryptocurrencies traded on open markets.
Volvo is also examining blockchain for country-of-origin compliance. Components can pass through several suppliers before reaching an assembly or spare-parts operation, leaving manufacturers exposed when sanctioned-origin materials or restricted destinations are not identified early enough.
The technology could preserve an auditable record across companies that do not fully trust one another. Branco identified organizational culture, limited blockchain knowledge, maintenance and the fragmented network landscape as larger barriers than the underlying technology.
Corporate Blockchain Pilots Move Into Settlement
The supplier-payment test expands Volvo Group’s blockchain work beyond record keeping, but it is separate from Volvo Cars, the passenger-vehicle company that began using blockchain to trace cobalt in electric-car batteries in 2019. That system records material origin, weight, chain of custody and compliance information across battery suppliers.
The experiment lands as large companies test blockchain for operational settlement rather than crypto trading. Hyundai recently completed a $20,000 USDT transfer between its U.S. and Mexico entities on Avalanche, reducing the internal remittance and verification process to about seven minutes.
Financial-market infrastructure is moving through a similar transition. DTCC began limited tokenization activity for stocks, exchange-traded funds and U.S. Treasurys in July ahead of a broader October rollout.
Volvo has not released a launch timetable, identified participating suppliers or disclosed live transaction volume for the closed-network project.



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