The Central Bank of Brazil is building with just about every blockchain it can get its hands on.
In a new interview about its plans for the nascent technology, members of the central bankâs blockchain team revealed they are resuming work with R3âs Corda distributed ledger platform, months after ceasing development because the technology was deemed too âimmature.â
After the enterprise blockchain consortium launched version 1.0 of Corda in October, the central bank said itâs ready to see if the newest version has what it takes to back up aspects of the countryâs financial infrastructure.
And with that, Banco Central do Brasil is now developing proofs-of-concept (PoCs) on four different platforms, trialing ethereum, JPMorganâs Quorum and Hyperledger Fabric alongside its Corda work.
The PoCs broadly focus on using blockchain to both back-up the central bankâs current real-time gross settlement system (RTGS), called the Brazilian Payment System, as well as better align the organization with the growing momentum for central banks to innovate using blockchain technology.
Speaking to that trend, the deputy head of the central bankâs IT department, Aristides Andrade Cavalcante Neto, told CoinDesk:
âWe are a central bank, and we enjoy a lot of stability. But you have to think change. You have to think in a different business model. So, for us, thatâs the most difficult part of this kind of work when weâre talking about innovation.â
While the blockchain team at Brazilâs central bank had considered a number of use cases â including enabling foreign trade in local currencies and an identity management system â as far back as January, it ultimately selected RTGS as its focus, according to the teamâs analyst Jose Deodoro De Oliveira Filho.
Instead of being netted periodically, RTGS is used to allow banks to settle their large-value debits immediately as they occur. Because these transactions are relatively infrequent, they have been identified by multiple central banks as a potential use case for blockchain.
Banco Central do Brasil processes 314,ooo transactions per day, moving a total of 839 billion Brazilian reals, or about $255 billion by todayâs exchange rate.
Talking to CoinDesk, De Oliveira elaborated on the decision to focus on the RTGS use case, stating that while the central bankâs current system has been helping commercial banks reconcile accounts for 15 years, they still donât have a backup system. And theyâre interested in whether a blockchain it suitable for the job.
According to De Oliveira, each of the platforms has its own âadvantages and problems,â but really only two main obstacles â albeit big ones â remain.
Specifically, the central bank canât âproveâ that implementing a blockchain system would be cheaper than implementing something more traditional, he said. And there are ongoing questions about the privacy of using a shared, distributed ledger.
âIf you want privacy you canât have the other features, and if you want the other features, you canât have privacy. So, thatâs what weâre trying to solve right now,â De Oliveira said.
But while RTGS is the primary focus of the central bankâs blockchain work, itâs also testing a blockchain-based âinformation exchange.â
Revealed for the first time to CoinDesk, the exchange, called Know Your Citizen (seemingly a play on the regulator-mandated know-your-customer compliance), is powered by Quorom in Microsoftâs Azure cloud. It also uses Truffle, a popular ethereum development framework, to interact with smart contracts.
Details about the project are âkind of a secret right now,â according to De Oliveira, but he said more information should be forthcoming in the ânext couple of months.â
Elsewhere, the central bank is increasingly open regarding its blockchain development.
Not only did it introduce its findings at the Central Bank Summit hosted by Ripple in New York last month, but also it has also presented its work to the International Monetary Fund, and will, later this month, appear at Blockchain Summit 2017 in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
As other central banks from all around the world, including Hong Kong, Japan, Canada and Europe, are typically in attendance at these events, Cavalcante Neto framed this openness as a way to workshop ideas with peers, saying:
âItâs very useful, this kind of meeting, to understand the different perspectives from different central banks about the technology.â
Brazilian real image via Shutterstock