Blockchain has the potential to significantly impact the insurance industry by reducing costs and enabling new business models and products. It allows for direct peer-to-peer transactions without intermediaries, increased automation through smart contracts, and improved transparency. However, blockchain technology still faces challenges related to scalability, speed, security of smart contracts, and integration with external data. The insurance industry is beginning to explore blockchain applications through partnerships and open innovation, but the technology is still maturing. Further experimentation is needed to identify the most promising use cases for blockchain in insurance.
The implications of blockchain for the insurance industry - Eurapco Peer Seminar - Unchaining the potential of Blockchain
1. Blockchain Peer Seminar
Unchaining the potential of Blockchain for Eurapco Partners
The implications of blockchain
for the insurance industry
& the current maturity
Vidal CHRIQUI @vidal007
#Eurapco#BlockchainSeminar2016
Turin, 13th of september 2016
2. Disclaimer
• This talk is assuming a basic understanding of blockchain general principles
• No public/private blockchain debate. Still most usecases described can be handled with public blockchain
• The duration of the talk does not allow to cover all the possible use cases
4. Toward the end of the middleman ?
• Bitcoin Blockchain made possible banking services without banks
• More generally, blockchain makes possible to transact/work
without a middleman
without trusting the other party – But still trusting the protocol
5. A high level of automation - Smartcontracts
• Smart-Contract are piece of software code that
Run on the blockchain, a highly secure runtime
Can execute money/asset ownership transfer depending on some conditions
• Automate some (piece of) contracts
6. Transparency
• Eliminate imbalance of information amongst participants
• Improves the capability of regulators (almost real monitoring) and reduces the regulatory costs
• BUT a real challenge when competitive advantage comes from information asymetry
7. A secure & low-cost technology
• Security
By design – Cryptography, Game Theory, Software
Proven by experience : Bitcoin Market cap is implicitly a 10B$ security bounty never rewarded
• Low cost transaction
8. Viable micropayments
• The ability to handle micro-payments with acceptable fees
• Micropayment + automation unlock new scenarios
Machine to machine transactions, Small rewards for users or partners for each small action, etc …
9. The end-user is responsible of his identity
• Transacting without middle-man brings the great responsability of managing its own identity
• Many solution involving : Hardware wallets, Software wallet, Online Wallet and sometimes third party
• Digital Identity remains a critical enabler for any blockchain application
10. The impact on Insurance Industry
The implications of
blockchain for Insurance
11. Blockchain as global registry - Fraud detection & Authenticity checks
• Blockchain can be used as a global distributed registry (Property & casualty) which allows easier
verification for authenticity, ownership, date/time of purchase, etc..
• Exemple : Diamond Verification (EverLedger), national car registry ….
12. Customer engagment & personnal data
• Blockchain for verifying proofs of personal data
• User share his data only ONCE and the data remains under his control
• KYC use case
Only 1 verification inter-product, inter-divisional, inter-location, inter-subsidiary, inter-consortium
blockchainblockchain
Insur
A
Insur
B
Insur
C
Partner
A
Bank
Partner
B
Elect.
13. Customer engagement & Loyalty programs
• Blockchain for building an universal loyalty program which allow users
to share/trade their fidelity points
to use their fidelity points as money at (selected) partners
14. Blockchain for marketplace back-office efficiency
• Inter-Insurers blockchain can bring many benefits including
Exact redudant and secure data
Reduced processing delays, reduced transaction costs
15. Automation via SmartContract
• Automation of the claim process – from submission to approval & payment
• Reduction of fraudulent claims
• Eligible for micro-insurance products like crop-insurance or weather-based insurance
16. Blockchain for embracing the IoT market
• Automation of damage detection, triggering the repair process & payment
• Automatic checking of the insurance policies or warranties
• Valid for cars, smart home, appliances and all IoT devices
Source : IBM Democray - ADEPT
17. Peer to Peer Assurance/Mutual – Total disintermediation
• Community driven
• Cash Back bonus at the end of a claimless period
• Easier and more affordable for customers
18. Blockchain impacts on Insurance – Use Cases overview
• The blockchain can be used
to optimize existing product or model
to enable new products and business models
Use Case InsureTech
example
Existing
products
or
models
Identity Management & KYC Tradle.io
Ledger of insured items Everledger
Certification of complaints history RootStock
Contract signing & MicroInsurance SafeShare
Management of sensitive (medical) data BitProof / SecuCoin
New
products
or
models
Automatic settlement of claims (SmartContracts) InsurEth
Peer to Peer Insurance FriendSurance /
DynamisApp
Crypto Mutual (SmartContract) WeKeep
19. State of the Art
The limitations of
the current technology
20. Scalability
• Number of transactions per second limited ( 5 to 7 tx/s in Bitcoin)
• Yet, this topic has a many solutions that are currently under implementation
SideChains (Blockstream)
Lightning Network (Bitcoin)
Raiden (Ethereum)
21. Speed
• High security in a P2P network brings latency and the necessity of a blockchain & confirmation time
In bitcoin, Block time is 10 minutes & confirmation time is 60 minutes
• Most solutions are using an off-chain approach (which is not blocking for most use cases)
22. Energy Efficiency & Proof of Work
• All verifications are done by all the nodes of the network which make a lot of energy consumed
• Yet, the cost per transaction seems acceptable
• Many solutions possible as the Proof of Stake algorithm OR simpler algorithm in private blockchain
23. Vulnerability to the « 51% attack »
• The 51% attack can disturb the consensus outpout
• Even though the vulnerability is too expensive to be realistic and can not alter most of the data, the trust
in the system can still be altered
51%
24. State of the Art
Some challenges to
come for blockchain
25. Legal and regulatory framework
• Not clear enough regulation about
cryptocurrencies
the strongness of proof in front of a court
The legal responsible (accountable) in case of any issue
26. User experience
• Blockchain user experience is still to be improved
Identity management for end users
Some edge security issues
27. SmartContract Security and Lessons learned from the #theDao Hack
• A very expensive lesson : 70M$ hack on theDAO ethereum smartcontract (June 2016)
• Technically the hacker has executed the contract as writen/coded
• Some lessons
Complexity can be enemy with security
The need for code formal verifications
28. Getting external data into the blockchain - Oracles
• Blockchain security principles does not allow smartcontract to call directly external data feeds
• Current solution involving oracles (« smartcontracts » exposing the data) have some limitations :
No decentralized oracles to date, Vulnerability, Profitability, No standards
INTERNETBLOCKCHAIN
How do we get the data in ?
29. Enterprise ready implementations
• To date, very few vendor options for mature implementation and connectors to the entreprise data
• Still public blockchain offer the most interesting platforms for setting-up Proof of Concepts
Bitcoin, Ethereum / Parity
30. Blockchain Governance
• Blockchain is not just about technology, it’s also about governance & economics
• Still some rules to be created & field tested :
How to share the cost infrastructure ?
How and who should handle un-resolved/rejected transaction ?
How to keep some transaction private ?
…..
32. Blockchain impacts strongly the Insurance Industry
• Blockchain impacts are not limited to the finance industry
• Blockchain can possibly impact all the aspects of the insurance
• A market signal that the (insurance) blockchain move is for 2016 : Metlife joins the R3CEV consortium
MetLife Inc., one of the largest insurers in the world has joined the R3-led blockchain consortium that now counts 60 of the world’s largest
financial institutions.
Insurance giant MetLife is the latest financial institution to join the financial private blockchain consortium led by New York-based startup R3.
MetLife will partner and interact with other R3 members in an effort to explore the potential application of blockchain technology in the insurance
industry. Specifically, how distributed ledgers can streamline activities such as business processing, policy administration, customer payments, new
investments management and the distribution of proceeds, a statement revealed
33. An unique opportunity for open-innovation
• The distributed nature of blockchain is a unique momentum
To collaborate with industry peers to create (costs-saving) blockchain industry standards & applications
To collaborate with new comers to create new products
34. Blockchain is to be explored from now - while total maturity comes
• The most relevent use cases can only be found with experimentating the blockchain approach
• Use case can already be experimented efficiently with existing public blockchains
• Experimentations should be conducted with industry peers or other industries partners
35. Thanks for your attention
For #blockchain news curation, you can follow me on twitter
@vidal007