Singaporeâs central bank has published new details of distributed ledger trial that saw it issue digital tokens tied to its national currency.
The report, released yesterday, details work conducted by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) in partnership with a group of domestic banks, along with professional services firm Deloitte and distributed ledger consortium R3. The publication comes months after R3 opened a research center in Singapore, initially launched in November.
The MAS report centers around âProject Ubinâ â an effort that, the authors say, seeks to launch âa tokenized form of the Singapore Dollar (SGD) on a [distributed ledger]â.
According the institution, the first phase of the trial â conducted between mid-November and late December of last year â included elements drawn from the Bank of Canadaâs Project Jasper (a digital currency initiative that also involved R3). The Project Ubin initiative itself relied on a private ethereum network that was created for the test.
Those involved in the project also tested Quorum â a private ethereum implementation developed by JPMorgan â to assess its privacy management tools.
The overall outcome of the trial, according to MAS, was positive, with the reportâs authors saying Project Ubinâs first phase âwas successful as it has brought together a wide range of partiesâ. Further, it managed to build a âworking interbank transfer prototype on a private ethereum networkâ.
Looking ahead, MAS hopes to expand on the Ubin concept and build further capabilities into the platform.
âFuture phases would focus on future operating model of Project Ubin, further technical analysis, focus on securities settlement by developing DvP and Cross-border payments (PvP),â MAS said.
Singapore image via Shutterstock