VeChain, launched in 2015 and fully live on its own mainnet by 2018, is a blockchain project built with real-world business needs in mind. Unlike many crypto platforms that focus only on finance or speculation, VeChain zeroes in on practical solutions, especially in supply chain management, where tracking, transparency, and trust are critical.
Sebastian. Vet, a VeChain ambassador, just shared on X about an academic report titled “Blockchain-Enabled Autonomous Supply Chain Management: A Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning Approach with Dynamic Smart Contract Optimization,” published by the International Research Journal of Modernization in Engineering Technology and Science.
The paper kicks off by pointing out the reality many companies face today: modern supply chains are under pressure from global volatility, fragmented operations, and growing demands for transparency, sustainability, and faster response times. To tackle these challenges, the report highlights how blockchain, artificial intelligence (especially reinforcement learning), and smart contracts can work together to reshape the way supply chains are managed.
The authors note: “By offering a tamper-proof, distributed ledger, blockchain facilitates verifiable traceability of goods and transactions across globally dispersed supply chain networks.” They go on to reference real-world examples, like IBM Food Trust and VeChain, as proof of blockchain’s ability to increase accountability in the logistics systems.
One of the limitations highlighted in current blockchain-based supply chain systems is their dependence on static smart contracts. While these contracts are effective at automating transactions and enforcing rules without intermediaries, they come with a drawback: rigidity.
Once coded, the terms of a smart contract rarely account for the unpredictable nature of global supply chains. This inability to adjust in real time means businesses are left with contracts that don’t reflect operational realities, often creating inefficiencies or even disputes rather than resolving them.
As a result, many organizations struggle to unlock the potential of blockchain in supply chain management fully.
VeChain, on the other hand, continues to stand out. Earlier, an academic study on blockchain-enabled ESG reporting in U.S. financial markets highlighted VeChain’s approach. The report praised its Proof of Authority (PoA) model as a practical example of how blockchain can support the growing demand for sustainable finance.
Beyond the academic spotlight, VeChain has had a massive month when it comes to adoption and ecosystem growth. Things kicked off with big news: Franklin Templeton, a global asset manager with $1.7 trillion under management, brought its BENJI platform onto VeChain. That means tokenized U.S. Treasuries, worth over $800 million, are now part of the ecosystem.
We also highlighted that the Hayabusa voting went live. The response was quick, and a quorum was reached in just five hours. July’s launch of StarGate is already paying off. Less than three months later, more than 5 billion VET is staked on the platform, generating 43.8 million VTHO rewards for non-custodial NFT Node holders.
VeWorld, VeChain’s “super app,” has already crossed 4 million downloads and continues to add features like fiat on-ramps, VeBetter apps, and StarGate staking. At the same time, VeBetterDAO has passed 4 million users and logged nearly 28 million on-chain sustainability actions.
Still, its native token VET hasn’t mirrored the same growth; it’s trading around $0.025, which is nearly 90% below its all-time high of $0.27. Even so, it did see a modest 4% bump today, showing signs of life as the ecosystem keeps building.