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Smart Contracts

Tetiana: key applications of blockchain in the oil and gas industry

Last updated: February 20, 2026 5:30 pm
Published: 2 months ago
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A HUNDRED years ago, in 1925, the world produced just over 500 million tons of oil per year. Today that number exceeds 4.3 billion tons. Natural gas consumption has grown even faster, from 200 billion cubic meters to over 4 trillion.

As extraction and consumption volumes have grown, the industry has become increasingly influential and profitable. And with that comes a greater need for transparency in distribution, transactions, and social responsibility.

Modern energy operates in a world where every ton of raw material, every deal, and even every gram of CO? must be backed by data. From environmental pressure to political turbulence, the oil and gas market works under a microscope. Companies are forced to report who they sold oil to, how it was transported, how many emissions accompanied production. This affects political relations, public reaction, and even pricing.

In a game with dozens of intermediaries and millions of documents, any mistake or forgery can cost millions. Traditional databases can’t handle this level of complexity. The industry needs a way to record information quickly, more securely, and with minimal human error. And not too long ago, the sector found this through blockchain.

So its emergence became an answer to the needs of the time. When the market grows and demands for transparency increase, the tools change too.

Beyond Crypto: Real-World Blockchain Use Cases in Oil and Gas

Blockchain is usually associated with cryptocurrencies and toys for crypto enthusiasts. But it expands possibilities much further. Today it’s about flawless business transparency, not just bitcoin. In such a complex and conservative niche as energy, this means tracking from the moment oil leaves the ground to when it ends up in a tank or gas pump, where each step can be recorded on the blockchain. This eliminates all doubts and provides absolute transparency in raw material logistics.

Some giants have been testing these solutions for a while now. Shell uses the Vakt platform to digitize trading, BP works with Komgo to automate financial operations, and Equinor applies blockchain for transportation contract control. All these cases prove that blockchain has become a real driver of efficiency. You can read more about how such solutions are integrated into processes on the websites of technology partners of the aforementioned companies and software developers for oil and gas (for example: https://dxc.com/industries/energy/oil-gas).

Smart Contracts: The Digital Referees of Energy Deals

Let’s break down a situation where an oil tanker just docked at port, the cargo passed quality control, and the contract signed itself. No correspondence, no lawyers, no human factor. This is exactly how smart contracts work: digital arbiters that automatically execute deal terms if all criteria are met.

In the world of oil and gas, where one deal can stretch to hundreds of pages, this is a real revolution. A mistake in a document or payment delay can lead to million-dollar losses. Smart contracts minimize such risks: they record terms in the blockchain, verify execution automatically, and eliminate manipulation.

It’s interesting to think if similar technology had existed earlier. For example, in 1973 during the oil crisis, governments and companies lost millions due to panic, fake contracts, and speculation on paper documents. Smart contracts that execute only after actual delivery could have reduced these risks and stabilized the market. But well…

Today such systems integrate with ERP solutions and risk management platforms. This allows companies to combine financial data, logistics, and quality control into a single ecosystem. Leading IT companies are the first to develop such integrations: DXC Technology, SAP, Oracle, IBM, Accenture, Infosys, Tata Consultancy Services, Cognizant, and Capgemini.

All this is gradually transforming an industry where paper agreements and manual checks once ruled into a digital environment where data is the most honest intermediary. By the way, this trend will inevitably roll into other niches. It’s just that such huge and influential businesses are usually the first to integrate such global solutions, because here the cost of error is enormous like nowhere else.

Supply Chain Transparency: From Rig to Retail

In the classic definition, supply chain transparency is the ability to see, control, and verify all stages of the supply chain. In energy, this means every barrel of oil or cubic meter of gas has a digital “passport” accessible to all market participants.

Blockchain in this system acts like “Google Docs” for the supply chain: everyone sees the same version of the truth. This minimizes disputes, speeds up audits, and creates trust between traders, suppliers, and government structures.

When IoT sensors are added to the chain, the system becomes even more powerful. For example, sensors on oil containers or LNG trailers automatically record temperature, volume, location, and add this data to the blockchain. If a container is delayed or pressure changes, the information is instantly updated for all participants.

Such solutions are especially valuable in conditions of political instability or logistics failures. In situations where routes change or documents can be forged, blockchain guarantees that data remains unchanged and verified.

For companies, this isn’t just a matter of control, but a competitive advantage. Partners are more willing to cooperate when they know the supply chain is transparent and the information is reliable. In the end, in a world where speed and trust determine success, blockchain becomes that very “gold standard of transparency” that everyone looks to.

ESG, Green Energy, and the Blockchain Link

Today energy companies, besides extraction and distribution, must prove they do it responsibly. ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) requirements cover environmental standards, ethical management, and social transparency. The EU has Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR) and Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD), the US has SEC Climate Disclosure Rules, and Asia has its own regional standards.

And blockchain was able to optimize this too. It creates a system where energy origin, emission levels, and efficiency are recorded in an immutable digital registry. Companies can show investors exact figures: when and how much energy was produced, where it came from, what its carbon footprint is.

Examples already exist. Energy Web Foundation creates a blockchain network for tracking green certificates, and Power Ledger allows households to trade surpluses from solar panels without intermediaries. All this forms a transparent energy market where “green” electricity can be proven documentally, not just claimed in a press release.

Essentially, blockchain becomes a green audit tool: it records who, when, and how much energy consumed, what emissions accompanied production, and whether the company really fulfills its environmental obligations.

When ESG became a requirement of investors and regulators, companies that already integrate blockchain into their reporting processes gain trust from the market and a competitive advantage in the “green race” for capital.

Challenges on the Horizon: Costs, Regulations, and Adoption

Despite all the advantages, blockchain in the oil and gas industry isn’t a magic “optimize” button. Many companies are still not ready to implement it fully. There are several reasons, and they’re more or less objective and understandable:

But the situation is gradually changing. Companies are joining industry consortia and creating common standards: this makes it easier to avoid process duplication and increase trust among participants. Partnerships with IT giants are developing, including DXC Technology, IBM, Microsoft, Accenture, Schlumberger, and Amazon Web Services. They provide cloud platforms, APIs, and ready-made modules that lower entry barriers.

The optimal path is to start with a pilot project. For example, tracking the origin of one oil batch or automating a single contract. Then scaling to logistics, finance, audit. Such a step-by-step approach allows testing efficiency without big risks.

Blockchain Roadmap for Oil & Gas Companies

Below is a practical action plan to go from idea to scaling with minimal risks. The focus here is on realistic steps and control points you’ll need at each stage. I’m not giving exact timelines (they depend on scale and resources), but each step is a separate checkpoint for “go / no-go.”

0) Preparatory stage: clearly define the pilot goal

Conclusions: Blockchain Trends in the Oil and Gas Industry

Blockchain in the oil and gas industry is a logical step toward transparency, automation, and trust. What once required months of checks and hundreds of documents can now happen in minutes without intermediaries. The main trends are already clearly emerging:

Major technology partners, as well as Shell, BP, Equinor, Chevron, TotalEnergies, and Saudi Aramco, are already creating or testing their own blockchain solutions. For some it’s a path to faster deals, for others to real environmental transparency.

Oil will continue to move the world, but trust is what holds it together. And blockchain is becoming the mechanism that ensures that trust.

Read more on Olive Press News Spain

This news is powered by Olive Press News Spain Olive Press News Spain

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