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Nairobi Law MonthlyNairobi Law Monthly
Home»Business»Million-dollar blockchain projects have finally come to Africa
Business

Million-dollar blockchain projects have finally come to Africa

NLM CorrespondentBy NLM CorrespondentJune 8, 2022Updated:June 8, 2022No Comments4 Mins Read
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Anne Kaluvu, a blockchain expert and lecturer at the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology (JKUAT) in Kenya, says there is a lot of vested interest on blockchain in Africa currently.

“I believe the efforts that Africans have shown in their creativity and openness to the technology is inspiring a lot of venture capitalists to salivate on what can happen if funds were availed in this market.”

The Nairobi Law Monthly September Edition

Nigeria, Seychelles, Kenya, and South Africa are the region’s blockchain darlings

96 percent of the funding went to Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, and Seychelles but it was in the first quarter of this year when the millions rolled into the continent more, showing promise of an even better year to come.

Anne Kaluvu, a blockchain expert and lecturer at the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology (JKUAT) in Kenya, says there is a lot of vested interest on blockchain in Africa currently.

“I believe the efforts that Africans have shown in their creativity and openness to the technology is inspiring a lot of venture capitalists to salivate on what can happen if funds were availed in this market.”

Nigeria, Seychelles, Kenya, and South Africa are the region’s blockchain darlings

96 percent of the funding went to Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, and Seychelles but it was in the first quarter of this year when the millions rolled into the continent more, showing promise of an even better year to come.

“Companies raised Sh10.6 billion in Q1 of 2022, a staggering 1,668 percent YoY increase from Q1 of the previous year,” the report says.

The continent’s venture funding growth in the first quarter of 2022 was 11 times the growth of general venture funding in the same period in 2021.

Blockchain financing in the second quarter of this year got off to a quick start, with some noteworthy fundraising by Mara which raised Sh26 billion in Nigeria and Kenya, Jambo which has injected Sh35 billion in the Republic of Congo, and Afriex which pumped Sh11.6 billion into Nigeria.

The link between blockchain technology and fintech

Globally, blockchain has mostly been deployed to ease pain points in payments, and it comes as no surprise that fintech businesses raised the most funding in 2021 at Sh78 billion, representing 53 percent of all blockchain funding in Africa.

Exchanges and fintech businesses together accounted for Sh11.7 billion or 79 percent of all total funding and the report calls Africa the ‘crypto continent’ as it leads the rest of the world in crypto adoption and central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) despite implicit and absolute crypto bans by 31 countries.

“Funding for blockchain in Africa is increasing because investors believe the continent has a greater potential for adoption,” Nairobi-based blockchain expert Benjamin Arunda said.

Blockchain smart contracts hold the biggest promise in making Africa a better place for business through tackling corruption, ending vote rigging, transforming health and education sectors, protecting intellectual property, creating fintech solutions, curbing the sale of counterfeits, and decentralizing electricity. The latest wave of funding is expected come in handy.

“There is no market where the growth of and demand for inclusive and accessible financial services is more prevalent than in Africa,” says Ian Putter, regional director of Blockchain Research Institute Africa at Standard Bank.

But Mathias Ruch, CEO of VC CV feels that there is an urgent need for governments across Africa to embrace blockchain technology and develop regulatory frameworks to regulate crypto and linked emerging industries.

“Breaking through the quagmire of apprehension with good regulation will enable the GDP of its countries to be progressively improved,” he says in the report.

Globally, blockchain companies raised S2.9 trillion in funding across 1,247 deals in 2021, a 713 percent increase in funding and an 88 percent increase in the deal count YoY compared to Sh3.6 trillion and 662 deals in 2020, the survey shows.

The US is still comfortably leading the field, with a 56 percent share of the global dollars invested in blockchain.  ( (Quartz)

The Nairobi Law Monthly September Edition

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