S&P Global Platts investing in Singapore innovation lab to drive digitalisation of commodity markets
ENERGY and commodities price agency S&P Global Platts is setting up an innovation lab in Singapore to catalyse the digitalisation of commodity markets.
The firm plans to host market participants in innovation workshops or hackathons to explore the use of blockchain, alternative data sets and new computational methods to trade and risk-manage commodity portfolios, it said in an announcement released at the annual Asia Pacific Petroleum Conference (APPEC conference) in Singapore on Monday.
S&P Global Platts added that it will work with government agency Enterprise Singapore to develop and deploy innovative solutions with the goal of providing market participants with robust and timely information.
For a start, it will seek market participants' input and develop use cases for digitally capturing, verifying and reporting oil inventory data.
Speaking at the event, Senior Minister of State for Trade and Industry, Dr Koh Poh Koon said: "New technologies will significantly change how the energy trading industry operates, in ways such as streamlining business processes and opening up access to financing."
Dr Koh added that startups play a key role in developing such solutions for businesses in the energy industry, with many having established their Asian base here in Singapore.
These startups stand to benefit from the grooming and mentorship that Platts Lab will offer, Satvinder Singh, Assistant CEO of Enterprise Singapore said.
Singapore is one of S&P Global Platts' three global commodities hub. The Republic is also the birthplace for the price agency's many benchmarks, including the Platts JKM benchmark for the liquefied natural gas marketplace.
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Energy & Commodities
Seatrium unit to fully redeem S$500 million worth of floating-rate bonds early
Anglo rejects BHP takeover bid as significantly undervalued
India rice prices at three-month low on shrinking demand
Gold prices set for weekly decline ahead of US inflation data
Pricey coffee is here to stay as hoarding, heat hit Vietnam supply
Oil settles higher as weak US economic growth offset by supply concerns