Iran Developing National Blockchain Platform on IBM Hyperledger Fabric

The Central Bank of Iran (CBI), via its Informatics and Services Corporation (ISC) and in conjunction with Areatak — a Tehran-based blockchain solutions provider — is developing a national blockchain project for its banking and financial sector.

Called the Borna platform, Iran hopes to use the project to revamp its banking ecosystem, creating a digital financial economy that will replace the current legacy system. There are also future plans to open up the platform to local private establishments, creating a unitary monetary and banking system for the country.

Given the country’s current standoff with the United States and the renewal of economic sanctions by the latter, rumors persist that Borna is an attempt by Tehran to circumvent these sanctions. Project stakeholders say such reports are unfounded and that Borna is only meant for use within the country’s borders — and doesn’t yet support any cryptocurrency token.

Borna: Iran’s public-private partnership blockchain initiative

Since 2018, Tehran has reportedly become increasingly interested in cryptocurrency and blockchain technology. Like other countries grappling with economic sanctions from the U.S., Iran has identified blockchain technology as a way of protecting its financial interests from the negative consequences of an economic blockade championed by Western powers.

According to local Iranian publication Al-Monitor, the ISC and Areatak are developing numerous protocols for Borna — the proposed Iranian national blockchain platform. The developers expect Borna to function as a central digital platform for the country’s banking and financial sectors.

One of the main aims of the Borna project is to reduce the entry requirements in terms of cost and technical expertise required to develop decentralized ledger technology (DLT) systems. Once launched, stakeholders expect that the country’s apex bank will allow fintech startups to be onboarded to the platform to create a truly digital landscape for Iran’s banking and finance industry.

The ISC exclusively owns the Borna platform, with Areatak acting as its private contractor building several prototypes for testing. The Areatak developers are currently building the platform on the Hyperledger Fabric — the IBM open-source enterprise blockchain platform.

One of the important features of the Hyperledger Fabric is its plug-and-play smart contract feature that makes protocols like consensus easy to design and program. Recently, researchers out of the University of Waterloo in Canada announced modifications to the Hyperledger Fabric that promises significantly faster transactional capabilities.