DPWH puts foreign-assisted projects on blockchain for public scrutiny
By Trixee Rosel
At A Glance
- Integrity Chain Portal allows independent verification of project funds and progress.
- Platform strengthens transparency, accountability, and safeguards against corruption.
- Public dashboard enables feedback, anomaly reporting, and tamper-proof records.
DPWH Secretary Vince Dizon (center) with Blockchain Council of the Philippines chairman Donald Lim (left) and DICT Secretary Henry Rhoel Aguda (right) during the launch of the Integrity Chain Portal on February 10, 2026, at DPWH headquarters in Manila. (Photo courtesy of DPWH)
The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) has placed its foreign-assisted infrastructure projects on a blockchain platform that allows independent verification of project funds and implementation to ensure transparency and accountability.
DPWH Secretary Vince Dizon said the Integrity Chain Portal strengthens oversight and safeguards against irregularities in infrastructure projects.
Launched at the DPWH headquarters in Manila in partnership with the Blockchain Council of the Philippines (BCP), the portal serves as a digital ledger that records project data using blockchain technology.
The system is decentralized and tamper-proof, ensuring that once information is uploaded, it cannot be altered.
Dizon said the platform complements the department’s existing transparency portal and allows verification of how funds are released and how projects progress on the ground.
He added that the main priority is to prevent corruption and ensure past irregularities are not repeated.
“This is a major step in ensuring that what we've seen in the past does not happen again. Not only do we need to hold people to account and recover public funds, but more important than that is we have to make sure this does not happen again,” Dizon said.
The Integrity Chain initiative stems from an agreement signed in September last year between DPWH and BCP to transform infrastructure governance through a real-time public dashboard that tracks project funds and progress.
The portal also enables citizen feedback, anomaly reporting, and provides tamper-proof records to deter corruption.
BCP chairman Donald Lim said the portal was conceived following the flood control corruption scandal, which increased public demand for stricter transparency in government infrastructure projects.
“The Integrity Chain shows where the budget goes as it records every stage online — from construction and payment to progress and implementation,” Lim said.