By Mary Catherine O'Connor
Oct. 16, 2006—Orlando-based pallet and reusable-container rental giant
CHEP has announced a new
RFID-enabled track-and-trace program it plans to pilot with two of its clients:
Procter & Gamble Brazil and beauty product company
Avon facilities in Brazil. CHEP says the system will provide its customers with increased supply-chain visibility and may someday provide additional information on the condition of raw and bulk materials in transit, through the use of sensors.
The new program, called the CHEP Global
Track and Trace System, uses software that collects
RFID tag data from CHEP’s PLUS ID pallets and other reusable containers, such as Intermediate Bulk Containers (IBCs), which are large reusable vats used to ship liquid raw materials, food ingredients and bulk quantities of manufactured products.
Gen 2 tags are affixed to the center post inside the pallets and on the sides of IBCs. For the pilot project, Procter & Gamble and Avon will track tagged IBCs.
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CHEP's Global Track and Trace System is now heading toward the pilot stage.
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Puneet Sawhney, CHEP's RFID program manager, says that for the IBCs in this pilot, CHEP is using an
EPC UHF Gen 2
tag, made by
RF Identics, which was recently purchased by
Avery Dennison (see
Avery Dennison Announces Licensing Program, Acquisition). Each tag contains an
Impinj Monaco/64 Gen 2
chip, which offers 64 bits of user-programmable
memory, in addition to 96 bits designated for an EPC. The tags have a hardened shell to make them rugged enough to withstand shock and vibration during transit.
CHEP is using a strong adhesive to attach the tags to IBCs. Upon associating a tag's ID number with the container to which it is attached, CHEP will encode the tag with an EPC containing a Global Returnable Asset Identifier (GRAI), a unique number based on GS1's standard for identifying returnable assets. A CHEP client will be able to use the additional memory to store data relating to the contents of the container, its last
read point and so forth. This additional information will be erased before the container is rented again. The EPC will also be printed on the face of the tag as bar coding and text, so that the container can be identified in facilities not equipped with RFID interrogators, or even bar-code scanners.