Specifically, the South African Reserve Bank and the Intergovernmental Fintech Working Group have completed a joint proof-of-concept project exploring the policy and regulatory implications of introducing the distributed ledger technology (DLT), as Bloomberg reported on April 6. Dubbed Project Khoka 2, the experiment involved clearing and settling debentures using blockchain-based technology and tokenized assets to inform policy and regulatory reflections. The participants included the Johannesburg Stock Exchange and South Africa’s top four banks.
Results of the South African experiment
The experiment demonstrated that there was a need for increased engagement of the policymakers and regulators in the country before it can incorporate distributed ledger technology into its financial markets. Furthermore, the project participants stated that there was a need for new capabilities across all stakeholders, integration of new platforms with legacy systems, as well as new standards, best practices, and a supporting ecosystem. Commenting on the project’s results, the central bank’s governor Lesetja Kganyago said in an online speech that: He added that regulators should proceed with caution when debating the rules and be “fully appreciative” of the need for clarity in committing to distributed ledger markets.
Africa welcomes Cardano’s blockchain project incubator
Meanwhile, the continent has received a pan-African incubator scheme called Ariob, developed to enhance the growth of projects funded by Cardano’s innovation engine Project Catalyst, as the blockchain’s engineering and education team IOHK explained in a blog post on April 5. According to the team, the launch of Ariob will equip high-potential Catalyst startups with “access to venture-building expertise and resources to help develop products that solve real-life challenges in Africa.” Project Catalyst is one of the largest decentralized innovation funds, focused on ecosystem development driven by the Cardano community.