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Digitalisation

Get your business ready for digital trade: meet the ICC Digital Trade Navigator

11 May 2026

With the Netherlands’ new electronic bill of lading law in force, this exclusive ICC member benefit could not be more timely. Join one of the onboarding sessions on 28 May.

Get your business ready for digital trade: meet the ICC Digital Trade Navigator

With the Netherlands’ new electronic bill of lading law in force, this exclusive ICC member benefit could not be more timely. Join one of the onboarding sessions on 28 May.

Digital trade is reshaping how goods, documents and data move across borders. Electronic bills of lading, digital trust frameworks, interoperable standards, evolving legal regimes — the building blocks are coming together quickly. For most businesses, the question is no longer whether digital trade matters, but how to get ready for it without taking a wrong turn.

That is exactly what the ICC Digital Trade Navigator is built for. Developed by the ICC Digital Standards Initiative (DSI) together with our national committees, the Industry Advisory Board and the Legal Reform Advisory Board, the Navigator brings the entire landscape of digital trade into one structured, easy-to-use space. Think of it as a Wikipedia for digital trade, ICC style, and it is reserved exclusively for ICC members.

Following our recent national committee briefings, we are inviting you to one of two onboarding sessions on 28 May, where we will walk through the platform live and show you how to put it to work in practice.

A Dutch milestone for digital trade

On 22 April 2026, the Netherlands took a defining step into the digital trade era. The Act amending Book 8 of the Burgerlijk Wetboek to introduce the electronic bill of lading (elektronisch cognossement) was published in Staatsblad 2026, no. 86, placing the eBL on equal legal footing with its paper counterpart under Dutch law. It is a foundational change that opens the door to fully digital sea-freight transactions involving Dutch parties.

For Dutch exporters, importers, banks, freight forwarders and in-house legal teams, the question shifts from “is this allowed?” to “how do we actually do it?”. That is precisely where the Navigator comes in. The legal foundation is necessary, but it is not sufficient on its own: companies still need to understand the standards that make eBLs interoperable across counterparties, the trust frameworks that prove a document is authentic, the data behind the documents, and how all of this connects to trade finance. The Navigator brings those pieces together so Dutch businesses can move from legal possibility to operational reality with confidence.

Read the law: Staatsblad 2026, 86.

A single home for digital trade knowledge

The Navigator (previously referred to as the “Sandbox”) has evolved into something far more useful for the membership. It pulls together the best of DSI’s guidance, ICC standards and the practical tools developed with our partners, organising them into a clear A-to-Z pathway. Whether you are stepping into digital trade for the first time or have been following developments for years, the Navigator helps them see how the concepts, legal frameworks, standards, documents, data, trust and interoperability, and trade finance fit together.

At its core, it is a learning and preparation platform. It is designed to help organisations assess their readiness, master the building blocks and ask questions in a safe environment before attempting implementation.

Three pillars that work together

The learner journey is a self-paced curriculum covering the foundations of digital trade, legal and compliance frameworks, standards, documents and data, trust and interoperability, and trade finance. Each topic includes curated reading, a glossary of unfamiliar terms and an embedded AI assistant that can point a learner to the right module when they have a specific question. Users decide what to skip, what to revisit and how quickly to move; HR teams can track progress and use the platform as a structured capability-building tool for their people.

The resource library is the single source of truth — every relevant document, standard, white paper and tool, both from DSI and from trusted partners, made fully searchable by topic and keyword. Practical instruments such as data-mapping tools, interoperability enablement utilities and implementation support all live here.

The mentor forum is where members engage directly with the experts who shaped this work. Questions are posted to topic-based threads, and assigned mentors are notified when new questions appear. Because the forum is open and threaded, members benefit from each other’s questions as well as their own as the body of guidance grows over time. Mentors are there to help your people make sense of the harder questions as they arise.

Why should you care?

The Navigator concentrates years of work, knowledge that you might otherwise pay seasoned consultants to assemble, into a single, structured platform. It is free to ICC members, accessible by company domain name, and designed to scale across teams: trade, legal, compliance, finance, procurement, supply chain, IT and HR.

It is crucial to know that this serves as preparation, not theory. Later this year we will activate the matching functionality so member companies can find counterparties, importers with exporters, manufacturers with freight forwarders, banks with corporates, to run real digital trade pilots together. Companies whose teams have completed the learner journey will be ready to engage mentors with the right questions, choose the right pilot platforms and avoid costly missteps.

In short, the Navigator gives you a way to build internal capability now, so that when they step into a live pilot, they take that step with confidence.

Who is it for?

The Navigator is designed for any organisation involved in cross-border trade: large multinationals running global supply chains, mid-sized exporters, SMEs participating in those supply chains, and the financial institutions that support them. Within those organisations, it speaks to a wide audience: operational teams who need to understand standards and documents, finance teams thinking about reconciliation and trade finance, legal teams tracking reform, and senior leaders who want to understand what is coming.

Although it is not a certification, member companies who want one should check out the ICC Academy's Certified Digital Trade Specialist course. However, for many learners, completing the Navigator will make passing that test much easier.

Join us on 28 May

The Navigator goes live this month, and we are running two live onboarding sessions on 28 May to walk you through the platform, explain how registration and member verification work, and answer any questions you have about deploying it inside your member organisations.

Both sessions cover the same material, so pick whichever time suits you best. Sessions will be recorded for anyone unable to attend live.

We look forward to seeing you there.

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