Africa has unveiled one of its most ambitious digital trade initiatives to date: the AfCFTA Digital Access and Public Infrastructure for Trade Initiative (ADAPT), an IOTA-powered platform designed to modernize commerce, remove longstanding bottlenecks, and integrate the continent into a unified digital marketplace.
Developed in partnership with the AfCFTA Secretariat, the IOTA Foundation, the Tony Blair Institute, and the World Economic Forum, ADAPT aims to solve systemic challenges such as paper-heavy documentation, fragmented national systems, and costly cross-border transactions.
A Three-Layer Digital Infrastructure for Continental Trade
ADAPT introduces a multilayer digital framework built on distributed ledger technology (DLT), blockchain, artificial intelligence, and stablecoins like USDT. The platform uses the IOTA network as a foundation for security, scalability, and fee-efficient processing.
Its architecture is centered around three key layers:
1. Digital Identity Layer
ADAPT will establish secure digital identities for businesses, government agencies, and trade operators using decentralized identifiers (DIDs) and verifiable credentials. These identities will integrate with national ID systems such as Kenya’s eCitizen, ensuring authenticity and reducing fraud across borders.
2. Data Exchange Layer
A unified, cross-border data hub will serve as a single trusted source of trade documents, including invoices, certificates, cargo data, and logistics records. This standardized flow of information is expected to cut border clearance times from as long as 14 days to under 3 days, dramatically increasing the speed of regional commerce.
3. Financial Layer
The finance rail aims to connect mobile money platforms, traditional banks, and digital currencies into an interoperable payments ecosystem. This layer is designed to push cross-border payment fees below 3%, making trade more affordable for SMEs, who make up 90% of Africa’s businesses.
Rollout Timeline: From Pilots to a Continent-Wide Network
ADAPT will roll out in structured phases:
- •2025–2026: Pilot launches in Kenya, Ghana, and several early-adopter states
- •2026 onward: Expansion to additional AfCFTA members as legal and technical frameworks mature
- •2027–2035: Full deployment across all 55 African countries
This staged approach ensures interoperability, regulatory alignment, and effective scaling across diverse national systems.
Expected Economic Impact: A New Era for Intra-African Trade
By 2035, ADAPT is projected to double intra-African trade and unlock more than $70 billion in new annual commerce.
Efficiency gains alone, from digitization, streamlined logistics, and faster payments, are expected to add $23.6 billion to the continent’s economy each year.
With the AfCFTA now the largest free-trade area in the world by number of countries, the ADAPT initiative positions Africa to leapfrog legacy systems and build a next-generation digital trade infrastructure fit for a globalized economy.

