Helveta provides you with the tools to protect your business, your community and your environment by tracking assets as they move through complex supply chains. Helveta’s software platform, CI World™ tracks your product from source to its final destination and provides a range of task specific modules that enable you to better manage and control your supply chains.
About Elements by Helveta
Elements is Helveta’s traceability platform, based on our experience of developing traceability software in emerging markets, providing you with increased transparency into your supply chain.
See our demo below.
Helveta in the Press
“Using handheld devices, Armajaro workers will scan uniquely numbered barcoded tags, secured to the individual cocoa sacks, at each stage of the supply chain. This data will then be uploaded into Helveta’s central online system to allow Armajaro to reconcile, analyse and share information about the cocoa to improve overall traceability throughout the supply chain” -Fast Company
“Technology can play a real part in proving traceability,” insists Karim Peer, chief executive of Helveta, a firm based in Oxford, which offers a “digital passport” for buyers and sellers. Helveta’s verification system, used in countries such as Liberia and the Democratic Republic of Congo, claims to track a product back to the forest where it began life as a sapling using barcode tags, which are then fixed to the product. -The Guardian
“A similar barcoding system already exists for animals. And the British company Helveta is hoping to track illegal logging by hammering plastic barcodes into the trunks.” -Fast Company
“Barcodes on rainforest trees has become a way to track and slow the pace of illegal logging. Helveta has created a system where all trees going through logging facilities have barcodes that connect them with certain forests and loggers, and if a tree comes through without a barcode to scan, it’s likely illegally logged and the culprit can be tracked. It’s a low-effort way to help slow the damage done to rainforests by illegal loggers.” -Tree Hugger