Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Monday, March 21 2022 - 20:00
AsiaNet
LawtechUK's Major Project Shows How ‘Smarter’ Contracts Are Here to Bring Benefits to Businesses Worldwide
LONDON, Mar. 21, 2022, /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/--

The 'Smarter Contracts' project has been launched by LawtechUK to encourage 
greater understanding and use of ‘smarter’ contracts by businesses globally. 

Smarter contracts are legally-binding digital contracts that use technology to 
provide benefits over conventional contracts. They range from simple 
applications like electronic signatures all the way through to sophisticated 
‘self-executing’ contracts. Smarter contracts are changing the way people live 
and work for the better and, as businesses across sectors realise that 
technology is available to improve and evolve contracts, the use of smarter 
contracts will increasingly become the norm. LawtechUK’s explainer video is 
here: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LkUsI0RFPeg].

Billions of contracts are entered into each year, with 26% of people regularly 
handling contracts in their everyday work. Digital contracts offer significant 
benefits, including increased efficiency and productivity, greater trust and 
transparency, and reduced risks of fraud. Paper-based and manual ways of 
contracting result in businesses missing out on 9%[1] of revenue each year. 
Moving from paper to digital trade documents is anticipated to free up an 
estimated 224 billion British Pounds in efficiency savings and generate 25 
billion British Pounds in global economic growth by 2024[2]. 

The project includes a Smarter Contracts Report 
[https://resources.lawtechuk.io/files/report_smarter_contracts.pdf] and a new 
Smarter Contracts & Digital Assets Hub 
[https://lawtechuk.io/programmes/smarter-contracts] with a range of additional 
guidance, insights, courses and resources, intended to provide a central space 
to learn more.

LawtechUK and its UK Jurisdiction Taskforce (UKJT) worked with collaborators 
across sectors, professions and countries to produce the Smarter Contracts 
Report. The examples included in the Report demonstrate why smarter contracting 
adds value to business practices and show how widely the technology is already 
being used across commercial, financial and consumer sectors. They include: 
- The use of digital documents and blockchain technology in supply chains 
  reducing friction in global trade and transforming logistics operations
- Self-executing contracts being central to renewable energy microgrids, with 
  the automatic recording of transactions and immediate payments for small 
  amounts of energy significantly increasing efficiency and enabling the 
  transition to clean energy
- Smarter contracts and blockchain technology being used to expedite the sale, 
  purchase and registration of homes
- Smarter parametric insurance contracts allowing for immediate payments to be 
  made as soon as the relevant data is recorded - for example, when flights are
  delayed or storm damage occurs
- Smart legal contracts and non-fungible tokens being securely linked to the 
  ownership of physical assets, revolutionising the way assets are traded with 
  economic and environmental advantages
 
In the UK, work by the Law Commission and LawtechUK’s UKJT has provided a 
strong legal foundation for the mainstream use of smarter contracts, including 
through the Legal Statement on Cryptoassets and Smart Contracts 
[https://lawtechuk.io/explore/cryptoasset-and-smart-contract-statement], the 
Law Commission’s advice on smart legal contracts 
[https://www.lawcom.gov.uk/project/smart-contracts/] and electronic trade 
documents [https://www.lawcom.gov.uk/project/electronic-trade-documents/], and 
the Digital Dispute Resolution Rules 
[https://lawtechuk.io/explore/ukjt-digital-disputes-rules]. 
 
Emma Dearnaley, LawtechUK: "Contracts are a vital part of business activity 
across all sectors. Yet many still approach contracts in much the same way as 
we have for centuries, creating and managing them in paper form. Technology 
makes this unnecessary now. Contracts and the valuable data they contain can be 
digitised, offering a wide range of benefits and the opportunity to reimagine 
contracts as live sources of intelligence that add value to business all the 
time. At LawtechUK we wanted to build on the legal and technical work already 
done by shining a light on practical ‘smarter contract' solutions to real-world 
problems, to spark ideas and inspire confidence in the further use of these new 
technologies."

Sir Geoffrey Vos, Master of the Rolls and Chair of LawtechUK's UK Jurisdiction 
Taskforce: "The Smarter Contracts report explains how smarter contracts and 
blockchain technology are currently being used. The theory is to dispel the 
myth that blockchain is a fringe technology used only by those wanting to risk 
their livelihoods or possibly make their fortunes on volatile cryptoassets like 
Bitcoin. The blockchain is now at a stage in its development equivalent to 
where the internet was in or around 1995. The internet was unstoppable in 1995 
and blockchain technology is unstoppable now. It will become ubiquitous in all 
major industrial and financial sectors, simply because it allows for the 
immutable recording of data, thereby reducing friction in commercial and 
consumer transactions and obliterating the scope for dispute as to what has 
occurred. This technology is not something that might happen in years to come; 
it is happening now. Our report collates some of the most accessible examples."

Professor Sarah Green, Law Commissioner for Commercial and Common Law at Law 
Commision of England and Wales: "Digital and smarter ways of contracting could 
revolutionise the way we do business, particularly by increasing efficiency and 
transparency. The Law Commission has concluded that electronic signatures can 
be used to execute documents and that the existing law of England and Wales is 
clearly able to facilitate and support the use of smart legal contracts. This 
confirms that the jurisdiction of England and Wales provides an ideal platform 
for the use of a wide range of ‘smarter contracts’ in practice. The Law 
Commission’s related work on electronic trade documents, digital assets and 
conflict of laws will further support the use of smarter contracts. The Smarter 
Contracts report published by LawtechUK is a helpful practical contribution to 
show the market how technology is already revolutionising contracts."

 
[1] 
https://www.worldcc.com/Resources/Content-Hub/View/ArticleId/9773/Poor-Contract-Management-Continues-To-Costs-Companies-9-Of-Their-Bottom-Line 

[2] https://www.lawcom.gov.uk/project/electronic-trade-documents/

About LawtechUK
LawtechUK is an initiative to support the transformation of the UK legal sector 
through technology, with a targeted work programme delivered through 
collaboration between the UK’s Ministry of Justice, Tech Nation and the 
LawtechUK Panel.
https://lawtechuk.io/ 

For more information, please contact: 
Corrie Raine, +44-07887593940, Corrier@lansons.com
 
Source: LawtechUK