WEF

Chinese blockchain project aims to be the ‘SWIFT’ of stablecoins and CBDCs

A SWIFT-style system for bank-issued and regulated digital currencies was launched by a firm with a tenure building China’s national blockchain project.

A Hong Kong-based blockchain company has launched a digital payments system aimed at bridging the gap between stablecoins and Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs).

Red Date Technology, the blockchain infrastructure firm which is also leading one of China’s blockchain efforts, launched the Universal Digital Payment Network (UDPN) on Jan. 19 during the World Economic Forum (WEF) 2023 meeting in Davos, Switzerland.

According to its whitepaper, the UDPN is a distributed ledger technology (DLT) platform that would serve a similar purpose to what the SWIFT network does for banks, but for stablecoins and CBDCs.

Tech engineering company GFT Technologies and the digital asset creation engine TOKO from law firm DLA Piper are also contributors to UDPN development.

“Just as the SWIFT network created the original common standard for messaging between financial institutions across different settlement systems, the UDPN will serve the same purpose for the emerging generation of CBDCs and stablecoins.”

According to a Jan. 19 press release, a “number of global tier 1 banks” are already involved in use-case proof of concepts (POCs) to test the network in cross-border transfers and swaps.

The release didn’t disclose what banks were taking part in the POCs, but Deutsche Bank, HSBC, Standard Chartered, The Bank of East Asia, and Akbank were represented on a panel at the UDPN launch in Davos.

A high-level overview of the UDPN architecture depicting CBDC systems connecting to off-chain “transaction nodes” which in turn connect to the on-chain “validator nodes.” Image: UDPN whitepaper.

The stablecoins to be used in the POC were also undisclosed. The networks whitepaper does state, however, that it only supports “CBDCs and regulated fiat-backed stablecoin currency systems as payment methods,” adding:

“No unregulated public-chain crypto-currencies, such as Bitcoin, will be accepted.”

Eight other proof-of-concept tests are scheduled for the network, including issuing and circulating a CBDC and bank-issued stablecoin and using UDPN as a payment gateway for e-commerce.

Related: Going cashless: Norway’s digital currency project raises privacy questions

The UDPN has been in development by Red Date for nearly two years.

Before launching this digital payments system, the company was known for its work on Blockchain-based Service Network (BSN), China’s national blockchain project.

In a now-deleted roadmap posted on Jan. 15, 2021, the BSN said it planned to build a global CBDC system that “will completely change the current payment and circulation method, enabling a standardized digital currency transfer method and payment procedure for any information system.”

The latest whitepaper makes no mention of Red Date’s tenure in steering China’s blockchain project, nor of the country’s own CBDC efforts with its digital yuan.

Previously, in June 2022 Red Date’s CEO, Yifan He, called cryptocurrencies the “biggest Ponzi scheme in human history.”

Davos-launched blockchain project aims to be the ‘SWIFT’ of stablecoins and CBDCs

A SWIFT-style system for bank-issued and regulated digital currencies was launched by a firm involved in building China’s national blockchain project.

A Hong Kong-based blockchain company has launched a digital payments system aimed at bridging the gap between stablecoins and central bank digital currencies (CBDCs).

Red Date Technology, the blockchain infrastructure firm that is also leading one of China’s blockchain efforts, launched the Universal Digital Payment Network (UDPN) on Jan. 19 during the World Economic Forum (WEF) 2023 meeting in Davos, Switzerland.

Tech engineering company GFT Technologies and the digital asset creation engine TOKO from law firm DLA Piper are also contributors to UDPN development.

According to its white paper, the UDPN is a distributed ledger technology (DLT) platform that would serve a similar purpose to what the SWIFT network does for banks, except for stablecoins and CBDCs.

“Just as the SWIFT network created the original common standard for messaging between financial institutions across different settlement systems, the UDPN will serve the same purpose for the emerging generation of CBDCs and stablecoins.”

According to a Jan. 19 press release, a “number of global tier 1 banks” are already involved in use case proof of concepts (POCs) to test the network in cross-border transfers and swaps.

The release didn’t disclose which banks were taking part in the POCs, but Deutsche Bank, HSBC, Standard Chartered, The Bank of East Asiaand Akbank were represented on a panel at the UDPN launch in Davos.

A high-level overview of the UDPN architecture depicting CBDC systems connecting to off-chain “transaction nodes” which in turn connect to the on-chain “validator nodes.” Source: UDPN white paper.

The stablecoins to be used in the POC were also undisclosed. The networks whitepaper does state, however, that it only supports “CBDCs and regulated fiat-backed stablecoin currency systems as payment methods,” adding:

“No unregulated public-chain crypto-currencies, such as Bitcoin, will be accepted.”

Eight other proof-of-concept tests are scheduled for the network, including issuing and circulating a CBDC and bank-issued stablecoin and using UDPN as a payment gateway for e-commerce.

Related: Going cashless: Norway’s digital currency project raises privacy questions

The UDPN has been in development by Red Date for nearly two years,

Before launching this digital payments system, the company was known for its work on Blockchain-based Service Network (BSN), China’s national blockchain project.

In a now-deleted roadmap posted on Jan. 15, 2021, the BSN said it planned to build a global CBDC system that “will completely change the current payment and circulation method, enabling a standardized digital currency transfer method and payment procedure for any information system.”

The latest white paper makes no mention of Red Date’s involvement in steering China’s blockchain project, nor of the country’s own CBDC efforts with its digital yuan.

A spokesperson for the project told Cointelegraph there is “no connection whatsoever between BSN and UDPN” as the latter is “managed and governed in a decentralized manner.”

In June, Red Date’s CEO, Yifan He, called cryptocurrencies the “biggest Ponzi scheme in human history.”

Update (Jan. 23, 6:40 AM UTC): Added comment from UDPN spokesperson.

Cointelegraph heads to Davos for World Economic Forum

Cointelegraph will be on the ground as prominent figures from the cryptocurrency and blockchain space converge on Davos during the World Economic Forum.

As the World Economic Forum brings global leaders together to tackle global issues, a number of cryptocurrency and blockchain events will create a vibrant sideshow in the snowy ski destination in the Swiss Alps.

Cointelegraph will be on the ground to cover the World Economic Forum (WEF) as well as a host of blockchain-focused events taking place. Key members from global governments, businesses and civil society converge on the town annually for the WEF conference, but cryptocurrency and blockchain events are beginning to make their mark during the exclusive event.

The official WEF agenda for 2023 has made provision for cryptocurrency and blockchain as talking points featuring during the week-long conference. A session titled “Finding the Right Balance for Crypto” on Jan. 19 at 3:00 pm CET will explore the “boom and bust” in crypto markets in 2022, and is set to consider the creation of “robust regulation” of cryptocurrencies while ensuring “positive macroeconomic and societal outcomes.”

Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse features in the session alongside the Netherlands central bank president Klaas Knot, the European Commission’s Mairead McGuinness, and Omar Sultan Al Olama, the UAE’s Minister of State for Artificial Intelligence, Digital Economy and Remote Work Applications.

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire will head up a session on Tokenized Economies on Jan. 17 at 4:15 pm CET, delving into which industries could see the biggest influence from tokenization.

Related: Crypto knocking on the WEF’s door: The view from Davos

The metaverse is another topic that is set to be covered during WEF. A session titled ‘Deployment in the Industrial Metaverse’ is scheduled for Jan. 19 at 9:00 am CET. Meanwhile, Meta’s chief product officer Chris Cox headlines a panel discussion, “A New Reality: Building the Metaverse,” which will unpack an estimated $180 billion in investment into the sector and its potential development driven by research, innovation, investment, and policy. This session is scheduled for Jan. 18 at 3:00 pm CET.

WEF is also tapping into the metaverse through its own 3D offering, allowing delegates to create avatars to explore different immersive environments.

Cointelegraph’s editor-in-chief, Kristina Lucrezia Cornèr, will attend WEF for the publication and is scheduled to moderate a number of panels at events during the week.

This includes a session during GBBC’s #BlockchainCentral Davos 2023 titled Interoperability and Climate Change on Jan. 17 at 1:40 pm CET. Cornèr will also lead a panel on Liquidity in Climate Markets & Discovering a Global Carbon Price at Hedera Haus on Jan. 16 at 3:35 pm CET.

A panel at Greek House on Jan. 17 at 9:30 am CET will see Cornèr drive a conversation around “The emergence of Breakthrough Technologies: new ways to mobilize finance for Sustainable Investments.”

Cointelegraph journalist Gareth Jenkinson will be covering GBBC’s #BlockchainCentral Davos 2023 and CV Labs’ Blockchain Hub Davos. Jenkinson is also set to moderate a session titled “Reports of Decentralized Finance Demise Are Greatly Exaggerated… DeFi 2.0 is Coming!” at Blockchain Hub on 17 Jan. 17 at 3:30 pm CET, as well as a panel on “The Future of the Metaverse” at GBBC on Jan. 18 at 5:20 pm CET.

A host of influential industry participants from the cryptocurrency and blockchain space are set to feature prominently at different events including the likes of AVA Labs CEO & co-founder Emin Gün Sirer, SkyBridge Capital founder Anthony Scaramucci, and Cambridge Analytica whistleblower and data protection advocate Brittany Kaiser.