1. Home
  2. Morocco

Morocco

Binance pledges $3M in BNB to Morocco earthquake victims

Binance said it will issue a series of airdrops worth up to $100 in BNB to users located in Morocco’s highly impacted Marrakech region.

Cryptocurrency exchange Binance has pledged millions of dollars in BNB (BNB) as aid relief for those affected by the large earthquake that struck Morocco on Sept. 8, causing at least 2,000 fatalities in Marrakech alone, the country’s fourth-largest city.

According to a Sept. 11 announcement, Binance will airdrop up to $3 million in BNB to users identified as living in the affected areas.

The earthquake was magnitude 7 on the Richter scale, which categorizes it as “major.”

Changpeng Zhao, founder and CEO of Binance, called the earthquake “devastating” for the Moroccan people and said his heart goes out to the country.

He also called for users unaffected by the incident to distribute the funds to those most in need:

“For Moroccan users who receive these donations but are unimpacted by the earthquake, we ask them to pass the funds on to those most in need.”

Binance said it will identify users in the region using a proof-of-address protocol completed before the disaster. Users in the Marrakech-Safi province, the most affected region, will receive $100 worth of BNB directly to their Binance accounts. 

Related: Oprah and The Rock collect crypto donations for Maui wildfire victims

For Moroccan users outside of the Marrakech-Safi area, Binance plans to airdrop $10 in BNB each. It expects nearly 70,000 Binance users living in the country to receive some level of aid starting Sept. 12.

It also said it created a public wallet address that is accepting contributions for additional aid, which can be made in BNB, Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH), USD Coin (USDC), Tether (USDT) and Binance USDC (BUSD).

In March, Binance carried out a similar aid scheme to those affected by the intense earthquakes that hit the Turkey-Syria border region, also with $100 airdrops in BNB tokens.

Crypto has been increasingly used as a medium through which aid is made accessible to victims of disasters and as a means of charity.

Following the devastation of the Turkish-Syrian earthquake, many major players in the Web3 space used crypto as a means of dispersing aid to impacted communities, including Binance, The Sandbox, Bitget, Tether and Gate.io, among others.

Magazine: Binance’s exec exodus, Nasdaq to trade AI orders and SBF loses bail appeal

New York anti-crypto stance softens as regulatory tide turns

Israeli crypto entrepreneur joins privacy-focused project amid fraud allegations

Moshe Hogeg said he was a “small” but “significant” part of the Tomi team, handling a network solution that seemed to allow transactions of ERC-20 tokens without an Etherscan record.

Moshe Hogeg, an Israeli entrepreneur, has returned to the spotlight of the crypto industry after speaking at a conference in Morocco on ‘alternative internet network’ Tomi.

Speaking at the Nakamoto Forum in Marrakech on June 6, Hogeg was one of a handful of project leaders at Tomi who spoke on the network’s privacy features to a crowd of investors, representatives from crypto and blockchain firms, and members of the media. The entrepreneur was arrested by Israeli authorities in November 2021 for allegedly engaging in financial fraud related to cryptocurrency as well as trafficking and underage prostitution.

In an interview with Cointelegraph, Hogeg compared himself to other industry leaders including Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao, who was targeted by United States authorities in their case against the global exchange. The Israeli entrepreneur claimed officials understood the power of public opinion among those in crypto and the financial world, and conducted “a well-orchestrated attack” to damage his reputation.

“I see that more and more key figures in the crypto industry are becoming targets to authorities,” Hogeg told Cointelegraph. “Whenever there’s something like this [...] they try to eliminate the risks. I think that something very similar happened to me in Israel.”

Moshe Hogeg speaking at the Nakamoto Forum at the Royal Mansour hotel in Marrakech, Morocco on June 6

Hogeg said there had been no official indictment in his case, which largely required him to be under house arrest for several months in 2021 and 2022. He reportedly received permission from an Israeli court to visit Morocco for the conference, temporarily lifting his travel restrictions between May 27 and June 13.

Several members of the Tomi team introduced features of the project, ranging from a content creator platform to minting nonfungible tokens. Hogeg described himself as being a “small” but “significant” part of the Tomi team amid his own controversies in his talks at the Nakamoto Forum.

Related: Privacy should be considered in ‘potential retail CBDC’ — Treasury official

As part of a demonstration for attendees, Hogeg and a Tomi developer showed how they encrypted Tether (USDT) to create a “totally private” token. He spoke on the network’s privacy solution, which seemed to allow crypto users to send ERC-20 and Ethereum-based tokens without any trace of the transaction on blockchain analytics platform Etherscan.

“Ethereum is great — but Ethereum is not private,” Hogeg told attendees. “Privacy is a basic, basic right. So developing a technology that allows you to transact billions of dollars without risking your privacy is groundbreaking.”

With the addition of Hogeg to the team, Tomi recently raised $10 million for the project on top of a $40-million funding round the firm announced in March. The price of the network’s tomiNET (TOMI) token surged to an all-time high of $6.59 on June 6 amid the Nakamoto Forum, but has since dropped to $4.70 at the time of publication.

Magazine: Bitcoin in Senegal: Why is this African country using BTC?

New York anti-crypto stance softens as regulatory tide turns

Morocco finalized crypto regulatory framework: Central Bank

The bill, which should be introduced to public discussion in the following days, will legally define crypto in the fast-growing market.

The Kingdom of Morocco may see its first crypto bill introduced “in the following days.” The document is already written by the Central Bank and will be discussed with the industry stakeholders. 

On Jan. 3, during the press conference, the Governor of Morocco’s Central Bank, Bank Al-Maghrib (BAM), Abdellatif Jouahiri announced a series of discussions between the BAM and the market participants. Regulators, such as the Moroccan Capital Markets Authority (AMMC), the Insurance Supervisory Authority and Social Security (ACAPS), will also participate. It will precede the implementation of the crypto law.

According to Jouahiri, the BAM collaborated with the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank while working on the document. Earlier reports claim that Moroccan officials also contacted the central banks of France, Sweden, and Switzerland to study their regulatory experience with digital assets.

The draft will offer a definition of crypto, “adapted to Moroccan context,” and aim at protecting individuals while not constraining innovation. Although the bill's details weren’t revealed, it could hardly be more restrictive, than the current legislation, which outlaws the crypto trade altogether.

In 2022, Morocco became the fastest-growing crypto market in Northern Africa, going from 2.4% of the population owing digital assets in 2021 to 3.1% a year later. In 2020, Soluna deployed the first blockchain-powered wind farm in Dakhla, the Southern and most windy district of Morocco. The energy excess of this farm powers the crypto mining operations.

Related: Crypto makes history in 2022: Five instances of governments embracing digital assets

A recent report from Chainalysis reveals that the crypto market in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region is the fastest growing in the world. Transaction volume in the MENA region reveals users received $566 billion in crypto in the time frame of July 2021 to June 2022. This is 48% more than the previous year.

New York anti-crypto stance softens as regulatory tide turns

Middle East and North Africa are fastest-growing crypto markets: Data

From institutional crypto usage in the United Arab Emirates to remittance payments in the Egyptian market, the last year revealed major growth for crypto in the MENA region.

Emerging markets continue to forge their way into the crypto scene finding a plethora of use cases, especially in the combined Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region.

A new report from Chainalysis reveals that the crypto market in the MENA region is the fastest growing in the world. Transaction volume in the MENA region reveals users received $566 billion in crypto in the time frame of July 2021 to June 2022. This is 48% more than the previous year.

MENA is followed by Latin America and North America with a growth of 40% and 36% respectively.

This region is made up of approximately 22 countries which include emerging markets such as Morocco, Egypt and Turkey. In these countries, the usage of cryptocurrencies finds practical use cases in savings preservation and remittance payments.

In countries such as Turkey and Egypt, which have both faced major devaluation of their local fiat currencies, crypto usage for savings preservation and remittances is especially dominant. 

Within the timeframe of the report, Egypt’s tripled transaction volumes can be accredited to local economic volatility. It has a year-over-year growth of 221.7% in crypto transaction volume. Turkey is the largest crypto market in the region with $192 billion in crypto received within the reporting period.

The wealthier countries of the MENA region, such as the Gulf nation of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) which is home to the crypto haven of Dubai, have also been contributors to the local crypto scene though in a different capacity. 

Related: Dubai issues crypto marketing rules to better protect investors

According to the report both Saudi Arabia and the UAE made it into the region’s top five countries in terms of received crypto value.

When it comes to these Gulf nations, however, crypto can be seen more in large institutional usage rather than person-to-person payments like remittances. 

Major crypto companies like Binance have received approval to set up operations in the UAE’s Abu Dhabi and Dubai, along with the neighboring country Bahrain.

A local partnership with Bianance Pay in the UAE has even allowed local entrepreneurs can set up businesses using crypto

New York anti-crypto stance softens as regulatory tide turns

Crypto firms ignore Africa at their peril as continent set for major adoption

Experts believe that Africa is primed to lead the next wave of global crypto adoption.

Even though the digital asset market seems to be witnessing a bit of a lull at the moment, the adoption of crypto-centric tech has continued to move forward with a full head of steam globally. Africa, in particular, is a continent where a growing list of mainstream financial entities have continued to make their presence felt, as they have begun to realize that the economic opportunities presented by the region are immense.

To put things into perspective, a recent report released by Singapore-based crypto data provider Triple A shows that the North African country of Morocco currently boasts one of the largest crypto populations in the region at nearly 2.5%. The kingdom currently leading many prominent countries in terms of daily Bitcoin (BTC) trades, trailing only behind Saudi Arabia across the entirety of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, an impressive feat, to say the least.

What’s even more interesting is that Morocco’s existing legislative framework is largely anti-crypto, with the country’s Foreign Exchange Office giving no indication of softening its stance anytime in the near future. Despite these stringent regulations, people across the region have continued to find means such as peer-to-peer (P2P) and over-the-counter trading through which to make inroads into this rapidly-evolving ecosystem.

Crypto firms entering Africa at unprecedented rate

Emmanuel Babalola, the Africa director for cryptocurrency exchange Binance, told Cointelegraph that with each passing month, the number of cross-collaborations taking place between local blockchain/crypto firms and various mainstream entities has continued to grow. Babalola said that most forward-looking tech companies are vying to gain exposure within the region, all while trying to help people across the continent embrace and realize the true utility of blockchain. 

He further pointed out that Binance has recently partnered with the Confederation of African Football (AFCON) to sponsor the TotalEnergies African Cup of Nations tournament, a move which he sees as a small step toward a grander scheme, adding:

“The AFCON sponsorship was a very exciting one. Football is the most popular sport in Africa, one that unites the entire continent and so, sponsoring the biggest football tournament in Africa was honestly a no-brainer. It corroborates our mission to take crypto mainstream across the continent.”

Staying in line with his company’s ideal of widespread crypto adoption across the African landscape, he also pointed out that Binance recently collaborated with some of the stars participating in this year’s iteration of Big Brother Naija (Nigeria) — the biggest reality show on the continent — to help bring crypto education to a wider mainstream audience. “We are [even] sponsoring Nigerian Idol — the Nigerian version of a popular singing contest,” he added.

Lastly, Babalola noted that in recent months, many unprecedented happenings have taken place across the global crypto ecosystem such as countries like El Salvador adopting Bitcoin as legal tender — something he believes was totally unfathomable just a few years ago — and thus it would not be surprising to see African nations follow suit:

“I think this is only the beginning of things to come. In general, as institutional interest in cryptocurrencies continues to rise, more mainstream entities making their way into the region is inevitable.”

Crypto can help redefine business across Africa

When asked about the continued growth of crypto across Africa, especially within the northern part of the continent, Adedayo Adebajo, Africa director for Jelurida, a blockchain software company that develops and maintains the Nxt and Ardor blockchains, told Cointelegraph that a vast majority of African countries like to consider themselves as one bloc, rather than being divided into regional categories.

In this regard, he noted that one aspect that has united most people living in Africa is their lack of tangible business opportunities, as well as a clear lack of access to high-quality banking alternatives that they can use to send and receive funds from across the globe. Adebajo added:

“African nations believed they were left out of the first three industrial revolutions. The 4IR (fourth industrial revolution) technology including blockchain and cryptocurrency has, for the first time in history, provided them with an opportunity to participate in making history. Most governments in the continent are now open to capacity building and localizing solution developments, among others. To do so, their doors remain wide open to foreign offers that will get them closer to their aim.”

When asked about the challenges that may arise as a result of most nations in the continent (especially those located across North Africa) adhering to an Islamic way of life, Adebajo noted that the key issue preventing crypto-based banking services from reaching the masses is not religion but a clear lack of understanding of what the technology brings to the table. 

“As Muslims, we have learned from quotable religious scholars that we are not excluded from using crypto or participating in its offerings, although this stance may perhaps remain debatable,” he added.

Related: Indonesia’s national Islamic council reportedly declares Bitcoin haram

Blockchain-based banking solution

Africa’s vast geographic size compounded by the presence of many small economies across the continent has led to many nations struggling with systematic infrastructure development, especially when it comes to financial services, something that has resulted in 57% of the continent’s population remaining unbanked

RJ Katunda, co-founder of African project World Mobile, a Cardano-based mobile network, told Cointelegraph that over the years, Africans have gradually become accustomed to using innovative payment systems such as Kenya’s M-Pesa.

However, he pointed out that there are now newer blockchain-based alternatives beginning to emerge, setting the context for crypto and digital currencies that offer a more convenient and direct P2P channel for remittance payments, international commerce and savings. He added:

“With many economies growing rapidly, crypto and blockchain-based projects will continue to enter Africa, where their proposition is relevant and where they can form partnerships with local entities. While many individuals use cryptocurrency in Africa, legislation in many countries lags. As in other jurisdictions, cryptocurrencies don’t fit within current regulatory frameworks.”

In essence, Katunda believes that the core issue preventing widespread adoption of crypto-tech (especially from a financial standpoint) across the region is a lack of perceived central control from many governments, which creates difficulties for authorities to oversee and mitigate bad practices. “However, many governments have announced that they are working on regulatory frameworks to emerge in the near future,” he closed out by saying.

Africa cannot be ignored any longer

Akin Jones, a partner at Gluwa Capital, an Africa-based investment fund focused exclusively on fintech lenders using blockchain technology, told Cointelegraph that Africa’s growing population and adoption of cryptocurrency mean that companies ignoring the continent are either not serious about the technology in the long term or have failed to realize the massive financial proposition currently in front of them.

In Jones’ view, Bitcoin could very well become legal tender across many African nations since most of these countries already find it quite hard to trade with each other because of constant currency fluctuations. Talking about North Africa in particular, he further opined that since the region serves as a bridge between Europe and sub-Saharan Africa, it would make a lot of sense for fintech firms to consider making inroads there, adding:

“Identity management, land ownership and insurance are three key areas that could be improved on across North Africa which could help change the perception in the region. CBDCs [central bank digital currencies] could also help ease the acceptance of cryptocurrency in this regard.”

Thus, it will be interesting to see how things shape out for the continent from here on out, especially since many of the nations within the region are known to suffer from an extremely high level of red tape. With many governments fast realizing the potential that crypto and blockchain possess, however, it would not be surprising to see countries making way for more foreign investment from established firms operating within this rapidly maturing sector.

New York anti-crypto stance softens as regulatory tide turns

Morocco is number one for Bitcoin trading in North Africa

The Kingdom of Morocco is the leader for Bitcoin trading across North Africa in 2021— despite its illegal status.

Estimates from Triple A, a Singaporean cryptocurrency provider and aggregator, state that 0.9 million people, or roughly 2.4% of Morocco’s total population, currently own cryptocurrency. 

That puts the kingdom as the top country in North Africa and in the top 50 holders of cryptocurrency population percentage, just ahead of Portugal.

Data from Useful Tulips — a platform that tracks peer-to-peer BTC trading across the globe — confirms the trend. The Kingdom of the West, as it’s known locally, has been the runaway North African leader for BTC trades in the past year, pipped by only Saudi Arabia when weighing up the entire Middle East and North Africa region.

Unfortunately for crypto enthusiasts, there has been no change in crypto laws in recent years. According to Morocco’s Foreign Exchange Office, it will not support a “hidden payment system that is not backed by any financial institution.” While the law came into being in 2017, the ban has not stymied adoption and as the data shows, Moroccan crypto enthusiasts continue to circumvent the ruling.

Nearby, the Egyptian pound is gaining on the Moroccan Dirham for BTC trades. On the 30 day period, UsefulTulips shows that Egypt is $20,000 short of catching Morocco. It remains illegal to trade BTC and crypto in Egypt, but even if a tiny percentage of its 102 million population and $360 billion GDP engage in the “illicit” activity, it will move the needle.

To bolster Morocco’s orange-tinted future, Harmattan Energy is set to build one of Africa's largest wind farms. The purpose of the 900MW behemoth wind site set in Dakhla, the Sahara region, is to “power blockchain computing.” As Bitcoin mining and trading is currently outlawed the group cannot openly purport Bitcoin mining.

Related: Africa’s crypto market has grown by more than 1,200% since 2020: Chainalysis

Nonetheless, as Cointelegraph reported on the project’s call to tender in 2018, selling at least 20% of its electricity output back to the Moroccan government could be a workable solution. First results are expected from Harmattan at the end of quarter one this year. 

Elsewhere, in April 2020, Binance added support for crypto purchases using the Moroccan dirham via a third-party platform, Simplex. It works the same way that Naira purchases for BTC work in Nigeria. It’s not quite as easy to buy BTC on Binance as it is in the nearby UAE, which has a direct fiat on-ramp, but it's a promising start.

Time will tell whether Moroccan lawmakers backtrack on banning Bitcoin. As it stands, Morocco will continue to lead the charge in North Africa even though it remains an underground activity.

New York anti-crypto stance softens as regulatory tide turns

$400M African fertilizer deal executed on blockchain eases COVID-19 slowdown

Some companies are using blockchain technology to open up the logistics routes that COVID-19 has closed down.

A state-owned Moroccan fertilizer company has executed a $400-million transaction using blockchain technology, in what it says is a first for intra-African commerce.

In a deal facilitated by the Eastern and Southern African Trade and Development Bank, OCP Group sold phosphate fertilizer exports to Ethiopia, using blockchain technology, in a deal worth an initial $270 million. The remaining deals will be executed in the coming months, taking the full transaction value to $400 million, reports Global Trade Review.

Trade finance deals that are typically executed over a matter of weeks can be finalized in hours using blockchain, according to OCP Group. TDB previously used distributed ledger technology to facilitate the export of $22 million worth of sugar from India to Ethiopia. The companies said that the use of blockchain tech simplifies the supply chain process, making it easier to validate documentation and improve transparency.

TDB CEO Admassu Tadesse said the bank has been focused on maintaining liquidity, while cross-border trade slowed down due to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“As part of our response to the pandemic, we have been providing liquidity to our clients to curtail cross-border trade and supply chains disruptions, and ultimately, to help our member states continue working towards their development objectives,” Tadesse said.

Tadesse stated that the utility of blockchain technology had made itself known during the logistics slow-down. “With transport logistics slowing down, blockchain has been instrumental in making this happen,” he said.

New York anti-crypto stance softens as regulatory tide turns