Indian cryptocurrency startup Trestor has completed a successful trial of its digital currency Trest in the African nation of Cameroon.
The pilot program included the Cameroon government and Socapssi, an organization created in Cameroon to bridge the gap between the informal and national insurance sector to deliver last mile payment services.
Cameroon, like many African nations, both lacks sufficient banking services and citizens with bank accounts, making traditional digital financial payment services extraordinarily difficult.
“We enrolled 500 people between the ages of 15 and 35 from a small economically-knit community,” Antoine De Padoue, founder of Socapssi said on the pilot. “We asked them to use ‘Trest’ as their default method of payment for 30 days. In short, we artificially created a Trest-based micro-economy. People were able to comprehend and understand this very new method of payment.”
De Padoue added that those who participated in the pilot program were excited by it, and started improvising their own uses for Trest payments within the first five days of the pilot.
The pilot found that quantifiable efficiency gains and the benefits of digital payments far outweighed any negatives.
The success of the pilot has meant that the Cameroon Government has committed to a full-scale roll-out of Trest payments, with a plan to have 500 Trestor retail partners established across Cameroon in the next 12 months.
Along the benefits of transactional digital payments, the project is also expected to have other benefits, including the creation of some 1,200 to 1,800 direct jobs.
“Trestor and Socapssi have created a payment system where none existed. Trestor has successfully demonstrated that peer-to-peer payments can still function in areas with practically zero banking and telecom infrastructure,” Trestor founder Kunal Dixita added.