ADAPT Digital Platform Hopes to Boost African Trade Using Iota Blockchain

A collective that includes the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Secretariat, Iota Foundation, the Tony Blair Institute and the World Economic Forum has joined forces to develop a digital platform in Africa to digitize trade across the continent.

Announced on Monday, the Africa Digital Access and Public Infrastructure for Trade (ADAPT) is an open-source digital public network that will enable cross-border payments through stablecoins and store digital trade documents and interoperable digital identities, according to the Iota Foundation.

Dominik Schiener, co-founder and chairman of the Iota Foundation, said in an X post that ADAPT aims to be rolled out across all 55 African nations by 2035 and streamline trade-related operations.

Among ADAPTโ€™s other goals is to generate $70 billion in additional annual trade, cut border clearance times from up to 14 days to under three days, and reduce cross-border payment fees from the current levels of between 6% and 9%.

Source: Dominik Schiener

โ€œBorder & customs clearing will go from weeks to hours, cross-border payments will be reduced to less than 3% and exporters will get access to global trade finance liquidity,โ€ Schiener said.

ADAPT rollout will start in Q1

ADAPT will launch in Kenya during Q1 next year, according to the Iota Foundation, and then move to Ghana and a third country, which is still to be confirmed. The full launch is slated to start in 2027 and continue until 2035.

โ€œThis will be a long and challenging road, but thanks to the commitment of the AfCFTA and the dedication of our partners I am convinced that we will realize this mission to connect Africa through the most modern digital trade infrastructure in the world,โ€ Schiener said.

The technology has already been tested by public authorities in several other countries, including the UK and the Netherlands, according to the Iota Foundation.

Structural inefficiencies a major problem in African trade

Chido Munyati, head of Africa at the World Economic Forum, said that trade inefficiencies have become a significant obstacle for African countries, one that he hopes digitization can solve.