The post Africa Turns to Stablecoins, IOTA to Unlock $70B in Cross-Border Trading appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Secretariat and the IOTA Foundation have introduced a digital trade initiative that places stablecoin-based settlement at the center of efforts to overhaul how goods move across Africa. The Africa Digital Access and Public Infrastructure for Trade (ADAPT), formed in partnership with the Tony Blair Institute and World Economic Forum (WEF), will establish a shared, open-source digital public infrastructure for the continent’s 55 member states, according to an announcement on Monday. It aims to enable instant cross-border payments, verifiable digital trade documents, and interoperable digital identities. While the initiative is framed as a modernization of trade processes, those involved say stablecoins — specifically USDT — are expected to be a primary engine of adoption. “Now that we’ve solved the data problem — digitizing and authenticating trade documents — we can do the trade finance part,” IOTA Foundation founder Dominik Schiener told CoinDesk. “We will also offer tokenization of physical asserts such as commodities and critical minerals, and cross-border payments using stablecoins like USDT for real-world payments.” The timing of the initiative coincides with the far-reaching inflection point for regulatory oversight of digital currencies. Over the past year, stablecoins have gained clearer regulatory pathways in markets like the U.S. and Hong Kong, fueling ever-higher payment volumes and growing institutional acceptance. For African governments, this presents an opportunity to leapfrog legacy financial infrastructure and plug directly into stablecoin rails that are becoming normalized worldwide. Africa’s traders currently face an estimated $25 billion in annual payment transaction fees, while document fraud contributes to billions more in losses, according to Monday’s announcement. Trade logistics remain deeply analog: a single shipment may require 30 entities to exchange 240 paper documents. In Kenya, border agents previously needed to log into 13 different systems to verify a consignment. Pilot deployments of… The post Africa Turns to Stablecoins, IOTA to Unlock $70B in Cross-Border Trading appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Secretariat and the IOTA Foundation have introduced a digital trade initiative that places stablecoin-based settlement at the center of efforts to overhaul how goods move across Africa. The Africa Digital Access and Public Infrastructure for Trade (ADAPT), formed in partnership with the Tony Blair Institute and World Economic Forum (WEF), will establish a shared, open-source digital public infrastructure for the continent’s 55 member states, according to an announcement on Monday. It aims to enable instant cross-border payments, verifiable digital trade documents, and interoperable digital identities. While the initiative is framed as a modernization of trade processes, those involved say stablecoins — specifically USDT — are expected to be a primary engine of adoption. “Now that we’ve solved the data problem — digitizing and authenticating trade documents — we can do the trade finance part,” IOTA Foundation founder Dominik Schiener told CoinDesk. “We will also offer tokenization of physical asserts such as commodities and critical minerals, and cross-border payments using stablecoins like USDT for real-world payments.” The timing of the initiative coincides with the far-reaching inflection point for regulatory oversight of digital currencies. Over the past year, stablecoins have gained clearer regulatory pathways in markets like the U.S. and Hong Kong, fueling ever-higher payment volumes and growing institutional acceptance. For African governments, this presents an opportunity to leapfrog legacy financial infrastructure and plug directly into stablecoin rails that are becoming normalized worldwide. Africa’s traders currently face an estimated $25 billion in annual payment transaction fees, while document fraud contributes to billions more in losses, according to Monday’s announcement. Trade logistics remain deeply analog: a single shipment may require 30 entities to exchange 240 paper documents. In Kenya, border agents previously needed to log into 13 different systems to verify a consignment. Pilot deployments of…

Africa Turns to Stablecoins, IOTA to Unlock $70B in Cross-Border Trading

For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com

The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Secretariat and the IOTA Foundation have introduced a digital trade initiative that places stablecoin-based settlement at the center of efforts to overhaul how goods move across Africa.

The Africa Digital Access and Public Infrastructure for Trade (ADAPT), formed in partnership with the Tony Blair Institute and World Economic Forum (WEF), will establish a shared, open-source digital public infrastructure for the continent’s 55 member states, according to an announcement on Monday.

It aims to enable instant cross-border payments, verifiable digital trade documents, and interoperable digital identities. While the initiative is framed as a modernization of trade processes, those involved say stablecoins — specifically USDT — are expected to be a primary engine of adoption.

“Now that we’ve solved the data problem — digitizing and authenticating trade documents — we can do the trade finance part,” IOTA Foundation founder Dominik Schiener told CoinDesk. “We will also offer tokenization of physical asserts such as commodities and critical minerals, and cross-border payments using stablecoins like USDT for real-world payments.”

The timing of the initiative coincides with the far-reaching inflection point for regulatory oversight of digital currencies. Over the past year, stablecoins have gained clearer regulatory pathways in markets like the U.S. and Hong Kong, fueling ever-higher payment volumes and growing institutional acceptance.

For African governments, this presents an opportunity to leapfrog legacy financial infrastructure and plug directly into stablecoin rails that are becoming normalized worldwide.

Africa’s traders currently face an estimated $25 billion in annual payment transaction fees, while document fraud contributes to billions more in losses, according to Monday’s announcement. Trade logistics remain deeply analog: a single shipment may require 30 entities to exchange 240 paper documents. In Kenya, border agents previously needed to log into 13 different systems to verify a consignment.

Pilot deployments of IOTA’s technology in Kenya and Rwanda have already delivered tangible gains. Kenyan exporters are saving around $400 per month on printing and documentation, freight forwarders have cut manual paperwork by up to 60% and border clearance times have fallen from six hours to roughly 30 minutes. Kenya alone now posts around 100,000 transactions per day to IOTA’s distributed ledger.

ADAPT will begin with Kenya, Ghana and a third to-be-confirmed country (likely one in North Africa) before expanding continent-wide from 2026, with the goal of integrating all 55 AfCFTA nations by 2035. AfCFTA estimates digitalization could double intra-African trade, unlock $70 billion in trade value, and generate $23.6 billion in annual economic gains.

“We could help a miner in Rwanda get access to onchain trade finance at 50% of the cost, getting paid almost instantly with low transaction fees using USDT,” Schiener told CoinDesk. “This is how we move beyond the typical boom and bust cycles in crypto and anchor our industry with real assets, real adoption, and real value.”

Source: https://www.coindesk.com/business/2025/11/17/africa-embraces-stablecoins-via-iota-to-unlock-usd70b-pan-continent-trade-tech

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Leonardo AI Unveils Comprehensive Image Editing Suite with Six Model Options

Leonardo AI Unveils Comprehensive Image Editing Suite with Six Model Options

Leonardo AI releases detailed guide to AI image editing featuring Nano Banana, GPT Image 1.5, and Flux models as competition heats up with Adobe, Google, and Canva
Share
BlockChain News2026/03/19 12:39
RBA warns high and rising risk of severe shock to world economy amid Iran war

RBA warns high and rising risk of severe shock to world economy amid Iran war

The post RBA warns high and rising risk of severe shock to world economy amid Iran war appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA)
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/03/19 11:49
Headwind Helps Best Wallet Token

Headwind Helps Best Wallet Token

The post Headwind Helps Best Wallet Token appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Google has announced the launch of a new open-source protocol called Agent Payments Protocol (AP2) in partnership with Coinbase, the Ethereum Foundation, and 60 other organizations. This allows AI agents to make payments on behalf of users using various methods such as real-time bank transfers, credit and debit cards, and, most importantly, stablecoins. Let’s explore in detail what this could mean for the broader cryptocurrency markets, and also highlight a presale crypto (Best Wallet Token) that could explode as a result of this development. Google’s Push for Stablecoins Agent Payments Protocol (AP2) uses digital contracts known as ‘Intent Mandates’ and ‘Verifiable Credentials’ to ensure that AI agents undertake only those payments authorized by the user. Mandates, by the way, are cryptographically signed, tamper-proof digital contracts that act as verifiable proof of a user’s instruction. For example, let’s say you instruct an AI agent to never spend more than $200 in a single transaction. This instruction is written into an Intent Mandate, which serves as a digital contract. Now, whenever the AI agent tries to make a payment, it must present this mandate as proof of authorization, which will then be verified via the AP2 protocol. Alongside this, Google has also launched the A2A x402 extension to accelerate support for the Web3 ecosystem. This production-ready solution enables agent-based crypto payments and will help reshape the growth of cryptocurrency integration within the AP2 protocol. Google’s inclusion of stablecoins in AP2 is a massive vote of confidence in dollar-pegged cryptocurrencies and a huge step toward making them a mainstream payment option. This widens stablecoin usage beyond trading and speculation, positioning them at the center of the consumption economy. The recent enactment of the GENIUS Act in the U.S. gives stablecoins more structure and legal support. Imagine paying for things like data crawls, per-task…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 01:27