By MICHELLE TAYLOR, Partner, and ALEKO PALTOGLOU, of Sparke Helmore Lawyers
Trade documents are the quiet engines of international commerce. They are often overlooked, but when an issue arises related to the documents, the consequences ripple across the supply chain.
Lost documents, courier delays, mismatched signatures and the occasional coffee stain can trigger a cascade of urgent emails, disputes and unexpected costs. Paper has served global trade well for centuries, but in an era where parcels can be tracked in real time and documents can be
signed electronically from the couch, the continued dependence on paper trade documents seems increasingly out of place in modern logistics.
Modern supply chains are complex networks of carriers, forwarders, financiers, insurers and regulators. Alongside this complexity, it has been noted that paper-based systems generate three persistent problems:
1. Delay – Paper moves as fast as the courier carrying it. When cargo arrives before its documents, goods sit idle while storage and demurrage charges mount.
2. Administrative costs – preparing multiple copies, verifying manually, correcting transcription errors and archiving paper documents all add up quickly.
3. Fraud risk – forged or duplicated bills of lading remain a longstanding issue. Paper is easy to manipulate, and the consequences are real and recurring.
The logic of reform is therefore straightforward: if the problem is paper, then getting rid of paper is the solution (or at least reducing its centrality).
Enter the global paperless trade movement.
Across the world, governments and industry bodies are rolling out initiatives to digitise cross border transactions, modernise logistics and cut the dead weight of outdated systems. Central to this effort is the Model Law on Electronic Transferable Records (MLETR) developed by the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law which gives electronic transferable records the same legal effect as their paper equivalents.