Central African Republic announces plan to tokenize country's minerals

Quick Take

  • The Central African Republic’s government has identified the tokenization of its natural resources as the next step forward in its digitization efforts.
  • The landlocked African nation became the first on the continent to adopt bitcoin as legal tender in April.

The Central African Republic (CAR) revealed the next step in its bitcoin adoption journey with plans to tokenize access to its natural resources, according to a statement released on Thursday.

The presidential news release said the CAR government will offer tokenized access to mineral resources to crypto and digital asset projects that establish a presence in the country. The natural resource tokenization drive will come under the auspices of Project Sango.

The government announced Project Sango in May, after passing a law recognizing bitcoin as legal tender the previous month. CAR is the first African nation to adopt bitcoin as a recognized form of currency and the second in the world after El Salvador.

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In addition to petroleum, CAR possesses other mineral deposits including diamonds, copper and rhodium. The country’s natural resources also include gold, limestone, cobalt and manganese, among others.

The landlocked African nation still remains one of the least developed countries in the world, in spite of its abundant natural resources. For President Faustin Archange Touadera, the tokenization of these “massive geological treasures” represents a means of creating new investment opportunities in the country.


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About Author

Osato is a news reporter at The Block as part of the crypto ecosystems team that focuses on DAO governance, staking, blockchain layers, and DeFi. He was previously a news reporter at Cointelegraph. Based in Lagos, Nigeria, he enjoys crosswords, poker, and attempting to beat his Scrabble high score. Follow him on Twitter at @OsatoNomayo.