Brazil’s central bank selects nine CBDC projects to move forward in innovation challenge

Brazil’s central bank revealed today that it has picked nine projects to move forward in its quest to develop a central bank digital currency (CBDC). 

The projects will move forward through an innovation lab co-managed by the bank. The lab, known as LIFT for its name in Portuguese, selected projects from companies including established banks, a DeFi protocol and an important crypto exchange. This exercise aims to research possible use cases for a digital Brazilian real, and the technical feasibility of various methods for getting there.

According to details released by Brazil’s central bank, LIFT has decided to advance the following projects with the aim of developing the digital real: 

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  • Aave - An open-source, non-custodial liquidity protocol whose CBDC project deals with forming a liquidity pool for offering loans
  • Banco Santander Brasil - A major bank working on a delivery versus payment (DvP) project to tokenize ownership rights for vehicles and property
  • Febraban – Brazil’s banking federation, working on a DvP project
  • Giesecke + Devrient – A German payment security company whose proposal centers on dual offline payments (when both the entities sending and receiving the money are offline)
  • Itaú Unibanco (With B3 and R3) – A major Brazilian financial services company, working on a payment versus payment (PvP) project for international payments 
  • Mercado Bitcoin (with Bitrust and CPqD)–  Latin America’s largest crypto exchange, working on a DvP project focused on crypto assets
  • TecBan (with Capitual)– An independent ATM network operator focused on open banking, which proposed an internet-of-things (IOT)-based logistics solution for e-commerce
  • VERT (with Digital Asset and Oliver Wyman)– a tokenization project for rural financing
  • Visa of Brazil, ConsenSys and Microsoft - Looking at using a DeFi solution for financing small and medium-sized businesses

According to the project’s published timeline, an implementation phase will run between March 28 and July 29. The central bank has previously indicated plans to decide on the finalized version of a CBDC in 2024, following the innovation lab in 2022 and pilot projects in 2023. 

LIFT received 47 proposals from 43 different companies, according to the press announcement. The companies are from Brazil, Germany, the U.S., Israel, Mexico, Portugal, the U.K. and Sweden. 

The digital real challenge is one of 11 projects that LIFT launched in 2021. The others have to do with topics such as open banking, simplifying digital payments, customer empowerment and paying taxes through a digital wallet.

About Author

Kristin Majcher is a senior correspondent at The Block, based in Colombia. She covers the Latin America market. Before joining, she worked as a freelancer with bylines in Fortune, Condé Nast Traveler and MIT Technology Review among other publications.