The project will entail the exchange of digitised letters of credit for actual trade transactions between Japan and overseas clients, with all documents created, stored and shared on a permissioned ledger between importers, exporters and their banks.
The system will also enable all parties to view the latest shipment status data, which can result in reduced trade transaction and processing costs.
The programme is the latest blockchain experiment conducted by the Japanese financial group, which is running a multitude of tests of the technology across its operations, from financial record-keeping to client document exchange.
Daisuke Yamada, managing executive officer and chief digital innovation officer at Mizuho, describes the bank as a market leader in Japan in applying the technology to its processes and workflows.
"We continue to work aggressively towards expanding our portfolio of its implementations across the group," he says.
This first phase of the trade finance project will lead to Mizuho conducting actual trade transactions based on Hyperledger Fabric in June 2017
Mizuho Bank is preparing to conduct its first live trade financing transactions over a distributed ledger developed in association with IBM