VASPA https://vaspa.org The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) Fri, 20 Mar 2026 11:09:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://vaspa.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/VASPA-1-1-150x150.png VASPA https://vaspa.org 32 32 252464384 NFIU Taps VASPA to Shape Nigeria’s National Risk Assessment on Virtual Assets https://vaspa.org/nfiu-nigeria-national-risk-assessment-virtual-assets/ Fri, 20 Mar 2026 10:59:24 +0000 https://vaspa.org/?p=2164

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NFIU Taps VASPA to Shape Nigeria’s National Risk Assessment on Virtual Assets

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Abuja FCT, Nigeria — In a definitive nod to its growing authority and crucial coordinating role within the virtual asset sector, the Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) has been officially enlisted by the Nigerian government to be a part of the Virtual Assets Working Group to help steer the country’s ongoing National Risk Assessment (NRA).

 

The Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU), acting as the central nerve center for the nation’s anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-terrorist financing (CFT) efforts, has extended a direct mandate to VASPA. The directive? To nominate an expert to the Virtual Assets Working Group, ensuring the industry’s voice is front and center as Nigeria evaluates its exposure to money laundering, terrorist financing, and proliferation financing.

 

For observers of Africa’s rapidly maturing virtual asset space, this is more than just a regulatory administrative step. It is the NFIU adopting an inclusive approach towards risk assessment. It is also a resounding validation of VASPA’s role as a self-regulatory organization (SRO) and recognized representative and mouthpiece for the virtual asset industry in Africa’s leading market, Nigeria.

A Milestone for the Virtual Asset Sector

This year’s National Risk Assessment is not business as usual. According to the NFIU Secretariat, this marks the first comprehensive national assessment specifically designed to evaluate risks associated with the virtual asset sector.

 

With virtual assets becoming an increasingly vital artery in Nigeria’s financial ecosystem—and drawing heightened scrutiny from global watchdogs like the Financial Action Task Force (FATF)—the NFIU recognized that a top-down regulatory approach wouldn’t suffice. Accurate data, ground-floor operational realities, and sector-specific risk indicators can only come from the builders themselves.

 

“Recognizing the important coordinating role of industry associations within Nigeria’s virtual asset and fintech ecosystem, the Secretariat considers your Association’s perspective essential to this exercise,” the NFIU noted in its communication to VASPA.

 

Inside the Room: The 6-Month Mandate

The stakes are high, and the work will be rigorous. The NRA exercise is projected to run for approximately six months. VASPA’s chosen representative—mandated to possess substantial knowledge of AML/CFT compliance, emerging typologies, and the regulatory landmines facing member institutions—will not just be a passive observer.

 

Participation in the Virtual Assets Working Group involves rolling up sleeves for deep data review, granular risk analysis, and the actual scoring of identified risks. This collaborative process will require voting and consensus-building among key public institutions, regulators, and industry stakeholders.

What This Means for the Industry and VASPA

This high-level engagement broadcasts a powerful signal to the global financial community and the FATF: Nigeria’s virtual asset industry is strongly committed to responsible innovation, rigorous compliance, and strict alignment with international AML/CFT standards. It is a crucial opportunity for Nigeria to ensure that it does not only stay out of the FATF “Grey List”, but also consolidate its achievements in this regard.

 

For VASPA, this is a strategic milestone. Earning a seat at the NRA table means the association isn’t just reacting to policy; it is actively co-authoring it. By feeding direct industry insights and empirical data into the NFIU’s framework, VASPA has the opportunity to review and shape the final conclusions of the working group. This ensures that upcoming regulations are balanced, informed, and conducive to innovation rather than stifling it.

 

“There’s no better way to demonstrate the forward-thinking and genuine drive by the NFIU to meet its mandate of coordinating this all-important National Risk Assessment. VASPA is ready to contribute its quota to the success of this critical national exercise,” remarked Stephen Azubuike, the Vice Chair (Policy & Regulations) of the outgoing Steering Committee.

 

VASPA’s leadership has been swiftly mobilized to deploy a representative who will carry the weight of the industry’s insights into these critical sessions.

VASPA’s Collaborative Work with the NFIU and EFCC 

  • Engagement with the NFIU as an SRO: In August 2025, VASPA was one of the organizations invited by the NFIU to an engagement with SROs in the virtual assets and FinTech sectors. There, participants discussed modalities for enhancing AML/CFT/CPF compliance within the sectors, explored collaborative mechanisms to strengthen self-regulation and oversight, identified practical approaches for risk management and reporting obligations, and discussed other important issues affecting the sectors. This eventually culminated into an onsite industry-wide engagement between the NFIU, VASPs, and SROs in Abuja FCT, Nigeria, in the same month.
  • Engagement with the EFCC as Industry Representative: Also, VASPA was an industry representative at a stakeholder engagement on preventing the use of virtual assets for financial crimes in Africa with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)  in July 2025.  Following this industry call, VASPA submitted to the EFCC a comprehensive policy advisory report, “Virtual Assets in Nigeria: Policy Advisory Report and Recommendations for the EFCC” in September 2025. Prepared in collaboration with the Blockchain Industry Coordinating Committee of Nigeria (BICCoN), the report served as a foundational blueprint for integrating Nigeria’s burgeoning virtual asset industry into a robust, secure, and globally compliant financial system. It balanced the immense economic potential of the virtual asset sector with the non-negotiable imperative of financial crime prevention, positioning the industry as a vital engine for national economic advancement.

Looking Forward

With Nigeria having gotten out of the FATF “Grey List” in October 2025, the country now needs to consolidate on last year’s milestones. As the virtual asset industry continues to evolve and the guardrails are being built and consolidated, one thing is abundantly clear: no national risk assessment is complete without the inclusion of the fast-growing virtual asset sector. And when the public sector needs inputs from the industry, they invite industry representatives like VASPA to be a part of the conversation towards shaping policies and regulations. As a virtual asset service provider (VASP) or industry player, are you aligning?

About VASPA

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) is a Pan-African industry body registered as an Incorporated Trustee with the Corporate Affairs Commission in Nigeria (CAC IT: 79069970) where it is headquartered. VASPA comprises individual, corporate, and institutional members from across Africa. For more information about us, please visit our website, www.vaspa.org. To become a Patron or Partner of VASPA, visit our Membership page: https://vaspa.org/become-a-member/. Individual and corporate members are also welcomed.

Related Posts

Regulatory Alert: Help Shape the Future of Virtual Assets Regulation in Kenya

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) warmly congratulates the Securities and Exchange Commission of Ghana (SEC Ghana) on the official launch of its Virtual Asset Service Providers regulatory sandbox, announced on 10 March 2026 under Notice No. SEC/PR/001/03/2026. This announcement, made by virtue of the Virtual Asset Service Providers Act, 2025 (Act 1154), represents a defining moment not only for Ghana but for the broader African virtual asset landscape. It is a milestone for the ecosystem.

VASPA Welcomes Ghana’s VASP Regulatory Sandbox: Commendation and Recommendations for Optimal Implementation

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) warmly congratulates the Securities and Exchange Commission of Ghana (SEC Ghana) on the official launch of its Virtual Asset Service Providers regulatory sandbox, announced on 10 March 2026 under Notice No. SEC/PR/001/03/2026. This announcement, made by virtue of the Virtual Asset Service Providers Act, 2025 (Act 1154), represents a defining moment not only for Ghana but for the broader African virtual asset landscape. It is a milestone for the ecosystem.

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Regulatory Alert: Help Shape the Future of Virtual Assets Regulation in Kenya https://vaspa.org/regulatory-alert-virtual-assets-regulation-kenya/ Thu, 19 Mar 2026 08:03:25 +0000 https://vaspa.org/?p=2146

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Regulatory Alert: Help Shape the Future of Virtual Assets Regulation in Kenya

Regulatory Alert: Help Shape the Future of Virtual Assets Regulation in Kenya_VASPA_Crypto Regulation in Kenya
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A new era for virtual assets in Kenya is officially underway. The National Treasury has released the Draft Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASP) Regulations, 2026, for public consultation. This isn’t just regulatory paperwork; it is the definitive blueprint that will operationalize the VASP Act of 2025 and dictate how virtual asset businesses are built, licensed, and scaled in Kenya.

 

The proposed regulatory framework is a collaborative work of the National Treasury, the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK), and the Capital Markets Authority (CMA). It introduces game-changing provisions, including the following:

 

  • Clear Paths to Market: Comprehensive licensing and authorization for VASPs
  • Ecosystem Trust: Robust consumer protection, market conduct, and governance standards
  • Institutional Security: Capital prerequisites, stringent cybersecurity, and clear reporting obligations.
  • Next-Generation Finance: Ground rules for Stablecoin issuance and the Tokenization of Real-World Assets (RWAs)

Call for Industry Feedback

This is where you come in.

 

We are calling on all our members, other industry players, and stakeholders: Do not let someone else draft your future.

 

Dedicate some time to review the framework, challenge any assumptions, and submit your informed feedback.

  • Public Participation Forums: Nationwide sessions running from 30 March–10 April 2026
  • Written Submissions Deadline: 10th April 2026. Submit your official comments directly to [email protected] or [email protected].

You may also channel your feedback through VASPA. We will aggregate your perspectives into our official, consolidated response to the National Treasury. Please email your views to [email protected] on or before 3rd April 2026.

 

VASPA will also hold a virtual town hall soon where the proposed framework will be discussed by industry stakeholders mainly from Kenya. Follow our social media pages: Linkedin, Facebook, and X.

Let’s build a business and regulatory environment that positions Kenya as one of Africa’s leading hubs for virtual assets. Read the draft. Have your say. Shape the future.

 

About VASPA

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) is a Pan-African industry body registered as an Incorporated Trustee with the Corporate Affairs Commission in Nigeria (CAC IT: 79069970) where it is headquartered. VASPA comprises individual, corporate, and institutional members from across Africa. For more information about us, please visit our website, www.vaspa.org. To become a Patron or Partner of VASPA, visit our Membership page: https://vaspa.org/become-a-member/. Individual and corporate members are also welcomed.

Related Posts

NFIU Taps VASPA to Shape Nigeria’s National Risk Assessment on Virtual Assets

Abuja FCT, Nigeria — In a definitive nod to its growing authority and crucial coordinating role within the virtual asset sector, the Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) has been officially enlisted by the Nigerian government to be a part of the Virtual Assets Working Group to help steer the country’s ongoing National Risk Assessment (NRA).

VASPA Welcomes Ghana’s VASP Regulatory Sandbox: Commendation and Recommendations for Optimal Implementation

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) warmly congratulates the Securities and Exchange Commission of Ghana (SEC Ghana) on the official launch of its Virtual Asset Service Providers regulatory sandbox, announced on 10 March 2026 under Notice No. SEC/PR/001/03/2026. This announcement, made by virtue of the Virtual Asset Service Providers Act, 2025 (Act 1154), represents a defining moment not only for Ghana but for the broader African virtual asset landscape. It is a milestone for the ecosystem.

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VASPA Welcomes Ghana’s VASP Regulatory Sandbox: Commendation and Recommendations for Optimal Implementation https://vaspa.org/vaspa-sec-ghanas-vasp-regulatory-sandbox/ Mon, 16 Mar 2026 15:15:34 +0000 https://vaspa.org/?p=2114

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VASPA Welcomes Ghana’s VASP Regulatory Sandbox: Commendation and Recommendations for Optimal Implementation

VASPA Welcomes Ghana’s VASP Regulatory Sandbox: Commendation and Recommendations for Optimal Implementation_ SEC Ghana, Ghana, Crypto Regulation
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The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) warmly congratulates the Securities and Exchange Commission of Ghana (SEC Ghana) on the official launch of its Virtual Asset Service Providers regulatory sandbox, announced on 10 March 2026 under Notice No. SEC/PR/001/03/2026. This announcement, made by virtue of the Virtual Asset Service Providers Act, 2025 (Act 1154), represents a defining moment not only for Ghana but for the broader African virtual asset landscape. It is a milestone for the ecosystem.

 

The admission of eleven (11) virtual asset service providers (VASPs) into Ghana’s inaugural regulatory sandbox is a concrete demonstration that African financial regulators can lead on innovation – not merely respond to it. VASPA commends SEC Ghana for operationalizing a structured, activity-based licensing framework that prioritizes investor protection, market integrity, and AML/CFT compliance, while creating room for responsible experimentation.

A Framework Worth Noting

The Ghana SEC sandbox framework contains several features that VASPA considers instructive for the wider continent:

 

  • A defined 12-month sandbox window, with a six-month mid-point review that allows market-ready VASPs to transition to activity-based licensing – reducing regulatory uncertainty while maintaining oversight.
  • An explicit commitment to use sandbox data to develop and publish guidelines across the full range of VASP activity categories – a model of evidence-based regulation.
  • A diverse cohort of sandbox participants, spanning exchange, custody, payments, and infrastructure services – signalling regulatory openness to the full breadth of the virtual asset industry.

Recommendations for Optimal Implementation

As observed across various emerging markets—particularly within the African continent—regulatory sandboxes can sometimes inadvertently stifle the innovation they were designed to protect. Without stringent adherence to global best practices, sandboxes often suffer from a lack of transparency and operational accountability. In some jurisdictions, these well-intentioned programs have unfortunately devolved into “dead ends,” trapping innovators in indefinite holding patterns without a clear path to full licensing.

 

To ensure the SEC Ghana’s initiative actively avoids these common pitfalls and successfully gathers the necessary data to develop robust Guidelines, we respectfully recommend integrating the following global best practices into your operational framework, drawing on the gold standards set by the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS):

 

  1. Dedicated Case Officers: Given that 11 VASPs have been admitted, assigning dedicated SEC liaison officers to each participant—or specific cohorts within the group—is vital. Much like the FCA’s regulatory guidance, this ensures continuous, documented, and accountable communication, preventing operational bottlenecks and fostering a collaborative, rather than adversarial, relationship.
  2. Iterative Feedback Loops: As the participation of these 11 VASPs provides the SEC with the opportunity to validate draft guidelines under the Schedule in Act 1154, maintaining an open forum for bi-directional feedback is crucial. Regulatory assumptions should be actively tested and revised based on real-time pilot data, treating the sandbox as a learning tool for the Commission just as much as a testing ground for the firms.
  3. Seamless Transition Phase: The most significant failure point of sandboxes is the transition phase. The SEC should ensure that the process for transitioning a successful VASP to an activity-based license after the 6- or 12-month mark  is highly streamlined. Avoiding a scenario where companies must pause operations indefinitely while waiting for what often ends up bureaucratic finalization is critical so Ghana can ensure that it maintains business continuity for these innovators.
  4. Transparent Evaluation Metrics and Defined Exit Criteria: To prevent the sandbox from becoming an ambiguous trap, the SEC must define and publish the exact Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) and compliance metrics that dictate what constitutes a market-ready VASP. The UK FCA model excels because innovators agree on a testing plan with clear, objective milestones before entry, ensuring they know exactly what is required to exit the sandbox successfully.

By adopting these operational standards, the SEC Ghana will not only build an efficient regulatory sandbox but also ensure a frictionless transition when it is time to publish the final Guidelines and open the licensing space to all VASPs under Act 1154.

A Call for Continental Collaboration

VASPA also calls on regulators and industry associations across Africa to treat developments such as Ghana’s sandbox launch as an opportunity for continental learning and cooperation. Regulatory fragmentation remains one of the greatest barriers to the growth of a pan-African virtual asset economy. We encourage the sharing of sandbox findings, licensing frameworks, and supervisory experiences across jurisdictions, including through existing regional bodies and emerging Africa-focused policy forums.

Collaboration with SEC Ghana

As a community of VASPs in Africa, VASPA looks forward to engaging with SEC Ghana, Ghanaian industry stakeholders, and sandbox participants as part of our ongoing commitment to building a well-regulated, interoperable, and inclusive virtual asset ecosystem across Africa. We welcome an opportunity for collaboration in the best interest of the virtual asset industry and SEC Ghana’s goals of market development and consumer protection and investor safety.

About VASPA

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association  (VASPA), incorporated in September 2024 and headquartered in Nigeria, is the premier Africa-focused advocacy group for the virtual asset industry. Our mission is to foster innovation, harmonize regulation, and build a safe and thriving virtual asset ecosystem across the African continent. VASPA engages innovators, regulators, policymakers, and the broader stakeholder community to promote responsible innovation, regulatory clarity, and consumer protection within Africa’s virtual asset sector.

 

We look forward to collaborating with SEC Ghana to execute a successful regulatory sandbox that accelerates the growth of Ghana’s digital economy and serves as a blueprint for the rest of Africa.

Yours sincerely,

 

Gabriel Eze                                                                                                 Favour Uche

Assistant Secretary-General                                                      Assistant Policy & Regulatory Affairs Lead

 

Buki Ogunsakin                                                                                       Senator Ihenyen

Trustee                                                                                               Founding Trustee

About VASPA

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) is a Pan-African industry body registered as an Incorporated Trustee with the Corporate Affairs Commission in Nigeria (CAC IT: 79069970) where it is headquartered. VASPA comprises individual, corporate, and institutional members from across Africa. For more information about us, please visit our website, www.vaspa.org. To become a Patron or Partner of VASPA, visit our Membership page: https://vaspa.org/become-a-member/. Individual and corporate members are also welcomed.

Related Posts

NFIU Taps VASPA to Shape Nigeria’s National Risk Assessment on Virtual Assets

Abuja FCT, Nigeria — In a definitive nod to its growing authority and crucial coordinating role within the virtual asset sector, the Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) has been officially enlisted by the Nigerian government to be a part of the Virtual Assets Working Group to help steer the country’s ongoing National Risk Assessment (NRA).

Regulatory Alert: Help Shape the Future of Virtual Assets Regulation in Kenya

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) warmly congratulates the Securities and Exchange Commission of Ghana (SEC Ghana) on the official launch of its Virtual Asset Service Providers regulatory sandbox, announced on 10 March 2026 under Notice No. SEC/PR/001/03/2026. This announcement, made by virtue of the Virtual Asset Service Providers Act, 2025 (Act 1154), represents a defining moment not only for Ghana but for the broader African virtual asset landscape. It is a milestone for the ecosystem.

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The Rails We Build Will Determine the Africa We Become: Unpacking the Scramble for Digital Africa https://vaspa.org/unpacking-the-scramble-for-digital-africa/ Sun, 15 Mar 2026 08:00:56 +0000 https://vaspa.org/?p=2072

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The Rails We Build Will Determine the Africa We Become: Unpacking the Scramble for Digital Africa

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Decades after the independence of African states, a new scramble is underway. It is not for land, gold, or rubber, but for data, digital infrastructure, and the financial pathways that will define the continent’s future.

 

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) recently convened a critical X Space event titled, “The Scramble for Digital Africa: Who Builds the Rails?” The X Space was moderated by Favour Uche (Assistant Lead, Policy & Regulatory Affairs, VASPA). Analyzing the insights from this pivotal discussion, the consensus among these innovators is clear: the future of African finance belongs to those who build its foundational infrastructure today. 

 

We are gradually moving past the era of relying solely on foreign infrastructure. A new vanguard of African-built, globally competitive brands is emerging to tear down the continent’s financial borders. Here is a look at some of the titans laying the tracks and the hard truths they shared about winning in digital Africa—not necessarily scrambling for it.

The Vanguard: Meet Leading Architects of Africa’s Digital Future

The brilliance of this panel wasn’t just in the theory; it was in the practical, battle-tested experience of the brands represented. These are the companies actively turning the continent’s biggest obstacles—fragmentation, illiquidity, and regulatory hurdles—into massive market opportunities.

 

  • Bantu & Interstellar (represented by Victor Olorunfemi): Fragmentation is the enemy of adoption. Bantu and Interstellar are tackling this by shipping and growing interoperable digital rails across Fintech and Web3. Their market positioning is clear: they are the architectural backbone connecting the isolated islands of African finance into a unified, powerful network.
  • Bitsave Protocol & Bizmarkets (Founded by Karla Nweke): The ultimate test of blockchain is real-world utility. Bitsave and Bizmarkets are leading the charge in asset tokenization, helping traditional businesses raise capital on-chain. By connecting real-world entrepreneurs with decentralized liquidity, they are democratizing wealth generation and proving that Web3 can fund the real economy.
  • BoundlessPay (Founded by Franklin Peters): Cross-border payments in Africa have historically been a nightmare of high fees and slow settlement. BoundlessPay is masterfully eradicating this friction. By driving truly borderless payments, they are positioning themselves as the essential conduit for pan-African trade, ensuring that value flows across the continent as seamlessly as a text message.
  • cNGN (Spearheaded by Uyoyo Ogedegbe): You cannot build African financial rails without ensuring that the value that travels on them are tradable. By enabling a robust, compliant local stablecoin from Nigeria, cNGN is solving the problem of Naira not being directly tradable with other virtual assets. They are building the critical bridge between everyday fiat reliance and the borderless efficiency of Web3.
  • ToroNet (Co-Founded by Dr. Ken Alabi): While others build apps, ToroNet is building the bedrock. As a layer-1 blockchain infrastructure provider purpose-built for global innovators, ToroNet offers the scalable, localized foundation that African developers desperately need. They are proving that the continent’s core infrastructure does not need to be outsourced.

The Core Directives for Winning the Market

Through the lens of these industry leaders, four undeniable directives emerged for any brand looking to scale in Africa’s digital economy:

1. Interoperability is Non-Negotiable

Fragmentation across 54 nations is a serious blocker. Brands like ToroNet and Bantu understand that African-built chains must talk to each other. The ultimate moat is not a walled garden, but seamless integration with interoperability protocols.

 

Dr. Ken Alabi observed that one of the things Africa needs more than many others is access to this new digital revolution. “Africa’s cost of financing is high, access to payment systems is low in many [African] communities. The World Bank rating for us in terms of banking penetration and mobile money access is about 50%, whereas in many others over 90%.”

 

To solve this, he argues against siloing. “We don’t want to build a system that is fragmented. Your asset, which belongs to you, should be free to move. You don’t want to have a project that needs payment for somebody and you say, ‘Oh, my tokens are on Ethereum, Arbitrum, Base, or Tron.’ This fragmentation is one of the things that is going to be holding the crypto industry back.”

 

Drawing a parallel to traditional finance, Dr. Alabi pointed out, “Nobody says, ‘Oh, my money is in Bank of America, so I can’t pay my mortgage with Chase Bank.’ Right? Money should be free to move across networks. If I have tokens… it shouldn’t be locked on one chain.”

 

Furthermore, ToroNet views transaction costs as a barrier. “We don’t believe that when you do a transaction, you should be required to pay gas fees. Gas fees lock you into an environment. People keep asking us why did you build something else? Because what exists isn’t going to work… Transactions should be like a public utility. Let the fees be on the entry and exit layer, just like it is for banks.”

 

Dr. Alabi summed up the interoperability mandate perfectly: “If one has to compete by locking people in, you won’t last.”

2. Liquidity Must Be African-Owned

Elegant rails mean nothing without volume. The panel highlighted that traditional finance (TradFi) and real-world assets hold the key to the liquidity crypto desperately needs.

 

Franklin Peters of BoundlessPay maintained that liquidity in Africa is massively fragmented. “Our counterparts have been able to aggregate massive liquidity concentration. The Binance, Bybit, HTX… have bridged this. Looking closely at how money moves, up to 80% of the money flow moves through these exchanges whereby these exchanges are able to share liquidity, leveraging APIs and back-end agreements. This is one thing that is lacking in Africa. We have not been able to build to this point.”

 

Karla Nweke (Bitsave) challenged the ecosystem to look at how Western DeFi is funded. “Where does the yield in DeFi come from? …There are two places: token emissions, which many of us know, and US treasury bills. An entire industry is being funded by an economy. So, I keep asking, where is our own DeFi? If we are going to solve our liquidity problem, we have to look for a way to make the values, the economic values, that we already have in our own system put them on-chain. And this is the mindset behind the product I built called Bizmarkets where DeFi can farm real businesses for yields.”

 

Uyoyo Ogedegbe (cNGN) echoed this need to plug into established capital. “There are many things we are not doing that we need to do. A big part of that is financialization—going to where local liquidity, such as market makers, pensions [reside]. Capital sits where capital is. You start by locating capital and plugging into it. You don’t build a capital base overnight. Fortunately, with the tokenization wave, a lot of the traditional players are now looking at the industry.”

3. Regulation is a Feature, Not a Bug

Rather than resisting regulators, the smartest brands are treating compliance as a core product feature.

 

Uyoyo Ogedegbe shared cNGN’s proactive approach: “Since 2022-2023, we have been engaging with the regulators. And there has been some progress, not just in Nigeria but across Africa. We are working with stablecoin issuers in Africa, and we are likely to have 2–3 more regulated stablecoins in Africa this year. Some things take time—requires a lot of learning, oversight, and process. There is VARA. CBN seems to be involved in that with the NRS and SEC. Even the SEC too has made a lot of progress… When the time is right, whatever the country decides, we are happy to play by the rules.”

 

Franklin Peters shared a stark lesson on regulatory resilience. “Pre-2020, it was an open market. There was no regulation. Then in 2021, came the ban… to stop crypto-related transactions in Nigeria’s banking and financial system. I have been pro-regulation from day one. Back then a lot of maximalists would attack you if you were considered pro-regulation. At some point, we built a version of BoundlessPay and Bitfxt… We partnered with Providus Bank who was our link to Mastercard. When the ban was announced, it killed our business because the entire business model back then was powered by banking access.”

 

Peters had to pivot, acquiring a financial services provider with a license in Mauritius to remodel BoundlessPay into a plug-and-play model. His advice to builders? “If you are building a product, don’t lay all your eggs in one basket or infrastructure.”

4. Product Clarity is Key to Adoption

Victor Olorunfemi (Bantu) recalled how fixing basic pain points drove their innovation. “When we started building in this space as far back as in 2017, the problem that we set out to solve has been currency fragmentation… The big problem statement was that if you had to travel to 5 countries in Africa… you had to first port your Naira into USD, get to the other country and convert it back to the local currency… This fragmentation problem is still there today and we continue to innovate.”

 

Karla Nweke noted that when you solve a real problem, users ignore the friction. “If you build something that people need, they don’t mind the hassles. When we started Bitsave, the first users were not Web3 natives… We have businesses that know nothing about blockchain. All they care about is that if they come on our platform they will get loans. The biggest case for adoption is to build something that people actually need. They don’t often care if it is blockchain technology.”

 

Franklin Peters pushed back against naysayers who claim the African payments and crypto space is saturated. “The industry in Nigeria has not even attained 1% of maturity. In shipping unicorns, we are yet to get to a fragment of maturity… Let people build. Support as many as you can support. Let us get to a point where we can say there is a crypto startup from Nigeria that has become a unicorn… Even if exchanges have millions of users, the majority of the exchanges in Nigeria do not have up to 15% of their users actively trading. We have not been able to scratch the surface.”

 

As Buki Ogunsakin (Vice Chair, Program & Communications, VASPA) puts it “Clarity is distribution. Solve problems visibly; let the tech sit quietly underneath… Clarity is the biggest distribution strategy nobody talks about enough.” Favour Uche agreed: “Build without jargon, abstract the technology, and solve the problem visibly.”

Final Words: The Single Biggest Threats and the Solution

When asked about the single biggest threat to the digital Africa movement, the panelists offered chilling yet actionable insights:

 

  • Dr. Ken Alabi: “Competition is out there. But I think we are well positioned to do very well, because we understand our own environment… We have an opportunity to build what we need, and build better. At the same time, we don’t have to throw the baby away with the bathwater… Our own experience is seeing farmers, market people, churches who donate every Sunday—millions of people—use blockchain but do not even know they are using crypto. Let’s look at what is good, what we need, and build something for our community.”

  • Franklin Peters: “The biggest threat is lack of regulatory protection for innovation. We are running out of time. We can be as big as the biggest brands out there. But we are in our holes because we are being fought from all angles. This is why at Boundlesspay today, we have remodeled to a plug-and-play model, leveraging partnerships.”

  • Karla Nweke: “The best case for adoption is if we look at pain points. If we solve certain pain points for users, they will happily come on chain. We have businesses that know nothing about blockchain. All they care about is that if they come on our platform, they will get loans. The biggest case for adoption is to build something that people actually need. They don’t often care if it is blockchain technology. And it is not just about the tech but the coordination as well.”
  • Victor Olorunfemi: “The biggest threat is the incursion of foreign interests without proactive protection or sovereignty. This happened time and again in history. Sovereignty without innovation is stagnation and innovation without sovereignty is colonization. We need a long game. Operators also need to find a way to play together as a team, while building individual products.”
  • Uyoyo Ogedegbe: With regulation, some things take time—requires a lot of learning, oversight, and process.  Our focus is to figure out how to make this infrastructure more accessible, more liquid, and more efficient and how to distribute it to players that need it the most.”

The Bottom Line

The scramble is literally on. The choices made today will determine if Africa controls its own digital destiny or simply rents it from foreign powers. Thankfully, with organizations like VASPA drafting policy frameworks and brands like Bantu, BoundlessPay, Bitsave, cNGN, and ToroNet laying the tracks, one could safely say that the continent’s digital sovereignty is in capable hands.

About VASPA

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA), founded in September 2024 and headquartered in Nigeria, is the premier Africa-focused advocacy group for the virtual asset industry. Our mission is to foster innovation, harmonize regulation, and build a safe and thriving virtual asset ecosystem across the African continent. For more information about us, please visit our website, www.vaspa.org. To become a Patron or Partner of VASPA, visit our Membership page: https://vaspa.org/become-a-member/. Individual and corporate members are also welcomed.

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Regulatory Alert: Help Shape the Future of Virtual Assets Regulation in Kenya

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) warmly congratulates the Securities and Exchange Commission of Ghana (SEC Ghana) on the official launch of its Virtual Asset Service Providers regulatory sandbox, announced on 10 March 2026 under Notice No. SEC/PR/001/03/2026. This announcement, made by virtue of the Virtual Asset Service Providers Act, 2025 (Act 1154), represents a defining moment not only for Ghana but for the broader African virtual asset landscape. It is a milestone for the ecosystem.

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Milestone Reached: Industry Consultation for Project Green-White-Green Concludes https://vaspa.org/milestone-reached-industry-consultation-project-green-white-green/ Mon, 09 Mar 2026 15:12:42 +0000 https://vaspa.org/?p=2056

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Milestone Reached: Industry Consultation for Project Green-White-Green Concludes

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Building the Gold Standard for Nigeria’s Digital Future.

ABUJA, Nigeria — The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) is proud to announce that the official window for industry feedback and stakeholder consultation for Project Green-White-Green has officially closed.

A Big Thank You

To the innovators, advocates, and players who shared their perspectives: Thank you. Your contributions are ensuring that this project isn’t just an initiative for the constructive re-alignment of policy and regulations, but also a catalyst for trust and growth in Nigeria’s emerging virtual asset industry.

 

We extend our deepest gratitude to the local operators, global innovators, legal experts, financial institutions, and industry leaders who participated. Whether you are a homegrown startup or a foreign VASP looking to expand into the Nigerian market, your feedback will be instrumental in refining a roadmap that is both commercially viable and regulatorily robust.

Demonstrating Our Commitment

Your submissions have touched on every pillar of the project—from the “Circuit Breaker” volatility mechanisms to the Tiered Licensing framework. By engaging in this process, you are helping us find the clarity to move away from the “regulatory paradox” of the past toward a future of clarity.

Meaningfully Contributing to Nigeria’s GDP

Project Green-White-Green applies to all VASPs—both local Nigerian entities and foreign entities—operating or intending to operate within the Nigeria virtual asset industry. By promoting the need for realignment, we are pushing for lowering the barriers to entry and the replacement of “regulation by enforcement” with a clear, predictable,and  transparent path to market.

 

By realigning the industry’s growth, models, and aspirations with national goals, we are promoting a more accountable, connected, and transparent virtual asset industry that will contribute to national growth and development without compromising market integrity, efficiency, and national sovereignty. We are ensuring that every participant is a “Green-White-Green” actor—dedicated to transparency, AML/CFT compliance, and the protection of Nigerian consumers.

 

When operators meet the standards of integrity (White), innovation (Green), and prosperity (Green), the industry will be able to meaningfully support Nigeria’s GDP and the projected $1 Trillion economy without compromising national security.

Industry Buy-In and Support

While the window for industry feedback was opened, we received feedback from various sections of the virtual assets industry. Below, we share a few words from some of the platforms and institutions that provided us detailed responses and recommendations on how best Nigeria’s largely stunted virtual asset industry can move from formalization to full access towards unlocking a thriving industry that is globally competitive in all dimensions, not merely ticking boxes.

Crypto-to-Fiat Conversion Platform

“Project Green-White-Green represents a constructive shift in tone—from adversarial regulation to collaborative state-building.  Nigeria does not lack innovation. It lacks coordinated integration. If implemented with operational precision, proportional capital structuring, and transparent governance, this framework could reposition Nigeria as Africa’s most coherent digital asset jurisdiction. We remain committed to participating in any pilot programs, technical consultations, or working groups required to bring this initiative to life.” – A leading VASP enabling easy and fast crypto-to-fiat conversion in emerging markets

Stablecoin Gateway to Global Finance

“We commend VASPA for the initiative and the timing of this roadmap. The shift toward a formalized market structure and the proposed integration with NAFEM are significant developments that warrant careful consideration.”- a leading VASP providing a gateway to faster, more affordable, and flexible finance globally through a stablecoin solution

An Academic & Research Institution

“Project Green White Green initiative is a well thought-out, comprehensive intervention project that holds a lot of potential to transform and leapfrog Nigeria’s virtual assets sector. The pillars are well captured, and the strategies are intentionally designed to accelerate Nigeria’s digital economy.”- an international center for emerging technologies of a federal university in Nigeria

 

A Network of Stablecoin Operators and Merchants

“The proposals outlined in the whitepaper represent a constructive effort to move the digital asset ecosystem in Nigeria from a period of regulatory uncertainty toward a more structured and coordinated framework. Regulatory clarity, fiscal integration, market integrity mechanisms, and inter-agency coordination will all play a crucial role in ensuring that stablecoin businesses can grow responsibly while maintaining financial stability and regulatory confidence.”- a leading network fostering collaboration, innovation, and growth of stablecoin ecosystems across Africa

Alignment between Project Green-White-Green and Nigeria’s VARA Framework

VASPA’s Project Green-White-Green and Nigeria’s newly introduced Virtual Asset Regulatory Authority (VARA) share a core vision of formalizing the country’s digital asset sector to drive national prosperity. Both initiatives are specifically designed to align with the Federal Government’s goal of achieving a $1 trillion economy by 2030 by transitioning Nigeria from a “regulation by enforcement” era to a structured, innovation-friendly environment. They seek to move the crypto industry out of the shadow economy and into a regulated framework that grants legitimacy to operators, provides them with essential banking access, and positions Nigeria as a global leader in digital asset governance.

 

Structurally, both frameworks emphasize a collaborative and multi-agency approach to oversight rather than any single, isolated regulator or regulators working in silos. Project Green-White-Green serves as an industry-led roadmap that advocates for the same “distributed supervision” model that the official VARA framework implements—integrating the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the Nigeria Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU), the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS), and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). While this “one-stop shop” is named the Virtual Asset Regulatory Unit (VARU) in the draft Project Green White Green White Paper, it is called the Virtual Asset Regulatory Authority (VARA) in the VARA White paper.

 

Also, both Project Green-White-Green and the VARA White Paper prioritize fiscal responsibility and national security; they each propose technical mechanisms for real-time tax remittance and enhanced traceability to prevent illicit financial flows, ensuring that the digital asset ecosystem contributes significantly to the Federation Account while protecting the country’s financial integrity.

 

What Next?

Accountability is at the heart of what we do. Having received your feedback, here is our roadmap for the coming weeks:

  • Review & Synthesis: The Project Management Office (PMO) is analyzing all submissions to refine the project’s operational guidelines. This is to ensure that the frameworks and protocols proposed in the White Paper remain  tools for enablement rather than  bottlenecks.
  • The “Feedback We Got” Report: Within the next 14 days, we will publish a summary of the feedback themes received, ensuring full transparency in how your input is shaping the project.
  • Publish the White Paper: Update the Project Green-White-Green White Paper after aggregating, articulating, and aligning industry feedback. Then, we circulate copies publicly, including to relevant agencies in the public sector, including the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Nigeria Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU), Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS), Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA), and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). 

A Call to the Industry

While this specific consultation window has closed, our door remains open. Project Green-White-Green is a living initiative designed to foster a safe, thriving, and globally competitive digital asset sector in Nigeria. We encourage all industry players and stakeholders to stay engaged, as we move into the public sector engagement phase.

 

As we prepare to launch what we believe will be one of the most coordinated public-private fintech efforts in Nigeria’s history, the journey has just begun. Project Green-White-Green—one of a number of country-specific projects VASPA is initiating to rebuild trust and confidence in Africa’s emerging virtual asset industry—is our collective opportunity to show the world that Nigeria’s digital asset industry is realigning, and becoming truly ready for the global stage.

About VASPA

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA), founded in September 2024 and headquartered in Nigeria, is the premier Africa-focused advocacy group for the virtual asset industry. Our mission is to foster innovation, harmonize regulation, and build a safe and thriving virtual asset ecosystem across the African continent. For more information about us, please visit our website, www.vaspa.org.

 

Join Us

To become a Patron or Partner of VASPA, visit our Membership page: https://vaspa.org/become-a-member/. Individual and corporate members are also welcomed.

 

Contact the PMO:

  • Office: Project Management Office (PMO), Project Green-White-Green
  • Organization: Virtual Assets Service Providers Association (VASPA)
  • Email: [email protected]
  • Website: www.vaspa.org

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Regulatory Alert: Help Shape the Future of Virtual Assets Regulation in Kenya

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​Project Green-White-Green Launches Roadmap to Transform Nigeria’s Digital Asset Economy https://vaspa.org/project-green-white-green-nigerias-digital-asset-economy/ Fri, 13 Feb 2026 06:59:16 +0000 https://vaspa.org/?p=1979

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​Project Green-White-Green Launches Roadmap to Transform Nigeria’s Digital Asset Economy

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Project Green-White-Green Launches Roadmap to Transform Nigeria’s Digital Asset Economy
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Introduction

ABUJA, Nigeria — In a bold move to end years of “regulation by enforcement” in Nigeria’s digital asset economy and transform the new economy for national development, the Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) has launched Project Green-White-Green. This project, one of a series in Africa, calls for collaboration with stakeholders in the private and public sectors, aiming to transition the country’s massive digital asset ecosystem from a state of “regulatory paradox” or operational limbo to a fully integrated pillar of the national economy.

 

Nigeria currently stands as a global titan in digital assets, ranking 6th in global adoption with over $92.1 billion in transaction volume recorded between July 2024 and June 2025. However, industry leaders warn that systemic friction and blocked market access threaten the nation’s ambitious $1 trillion economy roadmap by 2030.

 

Signalling that it is time to move from the friction of the past to full formalization, the project offers a vision where Nigeria remains a heartbeat of global liquidity while securing its own fiscal future.

 

To fully appreciate the significance of Project Green-White-Green, it is essential to understand the “Regulatory Paradox” that has defined Nigeria’s digital asset landscape over the past five years. The project is not just a policy proposal; it is a calculated response to a decade of innovation, volatility, and institutional friction.

The Historical Context: A Market of Extremes

Nigeria’s journey with digital assets has been a high-stakes tug-of-war between grassroots adoption and institutional caution:

  • The 2021 Resistance: In February 2021, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) issued a landmark directive prohibiting banks from facilitating crypto-related transactions. This effectively forced one of the world’s most active crypto markets into “the shadows”—fueling a massive Peer-to-Peer (P2P) economy that lacked formal oversight and tax contribution.
  • The 2023–2024 Pivot: Recognizing that resistance was futile, the CBN under a new leadership reversed the banking ban in December 2023. This was followed by the regulatory framework for VASPs in the capital market under the control of the Securities and Exchange Council (SEC). However, the legalization was incomplete in practice. Banks struggle to transition from a total ban to a restrictive regulatory model, creating a ‘shadow ban’ at the operational level.
  • The Blackout Era (2024–2025): The market faced its greatest challenge during this period, marked by the blocking of global exchange IP addresses and high-profile executive detentions. These events created an economic chilling effect, causing vital venture capital and indigenous talent to begin migrating to more predictable foreign jurisdictions.
  • Formalization Without Access (2025-2026): In 2025, Nigeria did not only introduce a new investments and securities law that recognizes virtual assets as “securities”, but the country also introduced tax reforms that formalized crypto taxation. Despite these significant milestones, the sector remains largely stunted with potentials yet unlocked. There is apparent misalignment between innovation and regulation & enforcements that call for a constructive realignment amongst all stakeholders.

Beverley Agbakoba-Onyejianya, Vice Chair on Corporate Governance of VASPA, emphasized that it is time Nigeria moved from formalization to market access. In the words of the corporate governance and compliance professional, “While Nigeria—and indeed some other countries across Africa—is not where it used to be in crypto regulation, the country needs to transit from formalization to market access. In other words, it’s time to enable business to actually flow, beyond ticking boxes that give Nigeria pass marks on the global map. Project Green-White-Green is essentially about bridging gaps so the country can truly move forward with innovation, confidence, and prosperity.”

The Economic Backdrop: Nigeria’s $1 Trillion by 2030 Ambition

Nigeria is at a pivotal moment in terms of its broader economic strategy. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration has set a target for a $1 Trillion Economy by 2030.

  • Digital Workforce: The administration views a globally competitive digital workforce as the engine of this growth. However, an unregulated or “blocked” digital asset sector creates a ceiling for fintech innovation.
  • FATF Grey List Exit: In October 2025, Nigeria successfully exited the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) “Grey List.” This was a major milestone in restoring global financial confidence, but it also placed a mandate on the country to maintain rigorous AML/CFT (Anti-Money Laundering/Countering the Financing of Terrorism) standards—a goal that Project Green-White-Green directly supports.

Where "Project Green-White-Green" Comes In

The name is a deliberate reclamation of national colors of Nigeria to signal a new social contract between the state and the innovator that VASPA is championing in collaboration with all stakeholders in the public and private sector:

Green (Innovation):

A signal to proceed, nurturing a nascent industry for global competitiveness.

White (Integrity):

A commitment to resolving past disputes peacefully and building an accountable and transparent ecosystem.

Green (Prosperity):

The ultimate goal is sustainable growth that secures prosperity for all, including the nation.

 

“The name ‘Project Green-White-Green’ is a deliberate reclamation of our national colors, symbolizing a new era of collaboration between the state and innovators. We’re championing a social contract that fosters innovation, integrity, and prosperity. With Green representing innovation and sustainable growth, White signifying integrity, and the second Green representing prosperity, we’re paving the way for Nigeria’s digital asset ecosystem to thrive locally and globally,” said Buki Ogunsakin, Vice Chair, Programs and Communications, VASPA.

The Three-Pillar Framework

The project is structured around three primary pillars designed to reconcile the interests of innovators with national mandates:

 

  • The Market Integrity Pillar: This pillar focuses on stabilizing the financial system through technical mechanisms such as “circuit breakers” linked to official exchange rates and a verification protocol to ensure seamless banking access for licensed providers. It also seeks to harmonize licensing between the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC).
  • The National Security Pillar: This area addresses security concerns by integrating digital asset traceability with Nigeria’s national identity database, ensuring compliance with global anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing standards while protecting privacy.
  • The Fiscal Sovereignty Pillar: The focus here is on formalizing the sector’s contribution to national revenue through automated tax systems, proposed tax amnesties for previous periods, and compliance-linked incentives such as temporary tax holidays.

Strategic Objectives and Impact

  • Economic Contribution: While the virtual asset sector is projected to generate over ₦500 billion in annual sovereign revenue through automated taxes and compliance levies, its true value lies in its role as a catalyst for Nigeria’s broader economic transformation. Nigeria can attract Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) through a clear, harmonized framework that signals to global investors that Nigeria is a predictable and secure destination for high-growth technology capital; create thousands of high-skilled jobs in software engineering, cybersecurity, compliance, and digital finance benefitting Nigeria’s youthful, tech-literate population and providing a vital pathway to reduce unemployment through the digital economy; and encourage global exchanges to establish fully licensed local subsidiaries, the project facilitates the transfer of cutting-edge blockchain and financial technology to the domestic market.
  • Regulatory Harmonization and Safe Harbor Pilot: It advocates for high-level policy interventions, including a presidential executive order to relevant executive agencies, to clarify legal classifications and ensure that regulations do not stifle indigenous innovation. To move forward, the initiative proposes a pilot phase that allows operators to transition into full compliance under a collaborative, non-punitive framework involving major regulatory bodies.

Overall, the initiative seeks to resolve Nigeria’s “Regulatory Paradox” by providing a structured environment that offers the government security and fiscal stability while providing the digital asset industry with the access and growth it needs to thrive.

 

The Case for Stakeholder Support and Participation

The name is a deliberate reclamation of the national colors to signal a new social contract between the state and the innovator that VASPA is championing in collaboration with all stakeholders in the public and private sector:

1. For the Government: A New Sovereign Revenue Stream

  • Economic StabilityThe introduction of “Circuit Breakers” and NAFEM-linked liquidity hooks ensures that digital asset trading supports, rather than undermines, national monetary policy and currency stability.
  • National Security: The integration of the “Observer Node” and user-verification process linked with the national identity database provides law enforcement with the tools necessary to eliminate the level of anonymity that often fuels illicit financial flows.
  • National Prosperity: By transitioning from a fragmented market to a fully formalized one, the government will be able to effectively unlock an estimated ₦500 Billion+ in annual revenue and also enable value chains that will sustain a thriving ecosystem.

2. For Operators (VASPs): Market Access and Growth

  • Ending the “Shadow Ban”: Through the VASP verification mechanism proposed by the project, compliant operators gain legitimate access to banking services, allowing for seamless transaction processing without undue flagging.
  • Incentivized Compliance: Participating operators can benefit from proposed tax amnesties for previous assessment years and a two-year tax holiday for newly licensed subsidiaries.
  • Removing Expansion Barriers: The project advocates for removing the 10% user-growth restriction for Approval In Principle (AIP) holders under the Accelerated Regulatory Incubation Program (ARIP), allowing businesses to scale alongside the market’s true potential.

3. For Regulators: Harmonization and Oversight

  • Eliminating Jurisdiction Gaps: The project offers a “one-stop shop” via a new inter-agency unit proposed to reduce the friction amongst relevant regulators and agencies.
  • Global Compliance: The framework ensures Nigeria remains in alignment with international standards, such as FATF requirements, reinforcing the nation’s recent exit from the “Grey List”.

4. For the Broader Ecosystem: Stability and Innovation

  • Reversing “Brain Drain”: By building a predictable Safe Harbor, the project incentivizes indigenous talent and venture capital to remain in Nigeria rather than migrating to or taking their ventures to offshore jurisdictions.
  • Inclusive Innovation: The project recommends tiered licensing that ensures that smaller, indigenous startups are not decapitated by steep capital requirements at this nascent stage of the newly emerging industry, fostering a competitive, diverse, and future-proof local industry.

“Starting with Nigeria, the African giant in digital asset adoption, we are working with all stakeholders—from innovators to regulators; users to enforcers; the people and the government—towards what we describe as the constructive realignment of the virtual asset industry,” said Stephen Azubuike, the Vice Chair, Policy & Regulations of the Steering Committee of VASPA. “This is informed by the result of months-long research into the common frictions and gaps that have continued to make the country an unlocked potential for years—whether due to misalignments between market forces and government forces or lack of collaboration between key stakeholders, both between the private sector and the public sector, and between actors within both sectors, or lack of sufficient information and understanding of key and complex issues regarding the sector” pointed out Mr. Azubuike.

A Public-Interest Initiative that Needs a Unified Commitment and Support

Project Green-White-Green offers a path from “regulation by enforcement” to “regulation by clarity and collaboration”. This initiative is not merely a regulatory proposal but a strategic imperative to secure Nigeria’s position in the global digital economy.

But the success of Project Green-White-Green depends on the unified commitment of the entire financial ecosystem. In the various phases of the project, VASPA will be engaging all stakeholders in this regard and invites stakeholders in the private and public sectors to work with it for “constructive realignment of Nigeria’s virtual asset sector”, which has just kicked off with VASPs. A draft Project Green-White-Green Whitepaper is currently being shared with leading VASPs in Nigeria for their feedback, after which an “aligned” copy would be made available to regulators and other government agency.

 

The current Executive Chair of the Steering Committee of VASPA, Senator Ihenyen, describing VASPA’s commitment as a continental mission, describes the project as a special project in Africa’s nascent virtual asset industry, starting with Nigeria. “While Project Green-White-Green focuses on transforming the digital asset economy in Nigeria, it is just one of the key projects VASPA will be championing across Africa. As we continue to understudy markets and engage stakeholders in various African countries and complete the ongoing constitution and transition of the VASPA leadership into a Pan-African one, similar projects targeting very consequential jurisdictions across the continent are also in the big picture. We believe the lessons we are getting from Nigeria so far will greatly benefit our subsequent work in other African countries.”

 

By joining this project, stakeholders are co-authoring the future of finance in Nigeria, ensuring it becomes green in innovation, white in integrity, and green in prosperity. To collaborate with VASPA on Project Green-White-Green, please contact the Project Management Office at [email protected].

About VASPA

Founded and incorporated in 2024, the Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) is the premier Africa-focused advocacy group for the virtual asset industry. Our mission is to foster innovation, harmonize regulation, and build a safe and thriving virtual asset ecosystem across the African continent. For more information about us, please visit our website, www.vaspa.org. To become a Patron or Partner of VASPA, visit our Membership page: https://vaspa.org/become-a-member/. VASPA also welcomes individual and corporate members.

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NFIU Taps VASPA to Shape Nigeria’s National Risk Assessment on Virtual Assets

Abuja FCT, Nigeria — In a definitive nod to its growing authority and crucial coordinating role within the virtual asset sector, the Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) has been officially enlisted by the Nigerian government to be a part of the Virtual Assets Working Group to help steer the country’s ongoing National Risk Assessment (NRA).

Regulatory Alert: Help Shape the Future of Virtual Assets Regulation in Kenya

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) warmly congratulates the Securities and Exchange Commission of Ghana (SEC Ghana) on the official launch of its Virtual Asset Service Providers regulatory sandbox, announced on 10 March 2026 under Notice No. SEC/PR/001/03/2026. This announcement, made by virtue of the Virtual Asset Service Providers Act, 2025 (Act 1154), represents a defining moment not only for Ghana but for the broader African virtual asset landscape. It is a milestone for the ecosystem.

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Africa’s Digital Asset Leaders Unveil the 2026 Builders Accord https://vaspa.org/africa-digital-asset-leaders-2026-builders-accord/ Sun, 08 Feb 2026 16:50:38 +0000 https://vaspa.org/?p=1931

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Africa’s Digital Asset Leaders Unveil the 2026 Builders Accord

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The 2026 Builders Accord by VASPA
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LAGOS, Nigeria — In a strategic move designed to evolve Africa’s role from global technology consumer to a primary architect of its financial future, the Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) has unveiled “The 2026 Builders Accord”. More than a document, the Accord is a continental blueprint designed to secure Africa’s economic future through digital asset leadership. The comprehensive framework, forged during a high-level Builders’ Mastermind Lunch event in December 2025, represents a binding commitment to action from Africa’s digital asset industry players. 

 

The Accord is not a mere industry manifesto, but a shared operating mandate establishing concrete steps, governance structure, and accountability mechanisms to transform Africa’s virtual asset ecosystem by 2027.

A Bridge from Dialogue to Deployment

“This Accord represents our move beyond dialogue to deployment and beyond advocacy to architecture,” says Buki Ogunsakin, VASPA’s Vice Chair for Programs and Communications. “Our objective is to build a globally competitive ecosystem in 2026 that serves as Africa’s economic engine. Builders must be a part of this because the alternative is repeating the cycle of value leakage we witnessed in consumer fintech.”

 

The statement reinforces the whole point of the Accord: Africa needs to make a binding commitment to action.

Institutional Governance and Accountability

To ensure the Accord leads to tangible results, VASPA has embedded governance standards into the framework. “Signatory organizations are required to appoint a C-Level ‘Accord Champion’ and participate in quarterly progress reviews to track collective goals,” explained Beverly Agbakoba-Onyejianya, VASPA’s Vice Chair, Corporate Governance. 

 

“We are mandating internal accountability,” she added. This ensures that commitments translate into measurable outcomes, transforming aspiration into achievement.

The Private Sector Commitment: A Covenant for Growth

The private sector’s role is solidified through formal endorsements, with companies pledging resources to the collective cause. Franklin Peters, CEO of Boundlesspay, one of the early signatories to the Accord, spoke to the necessity of this unified front.

 

“As builders, we recognize that our greatest risk is not external competition, but our own internal fragmentation and short-term thinking,” Peters remarked. “By signing this Accord, we are entering a covenant to prioritize collective advancement over individual advantage. Boundlesspay is committed to the Accord’s mandate, including allocating at least 1% of our annual R&D budget specifically to the interoperability and standardization initiatives that will build Africa’s continental railway”.

The Five Pillars of the 2026 Builders Accord

The Accord revolves around five strategic focus areas architectured to position Africa as a global leader in digital finance.

1. Strategic Posture: Building Globally Competitive Products

The Accord challenges African builders to develop products that compete on the global stage, using local markets as a launchpad rather than a destination. This pillar emphasizes moving beyond solutions that merely replicate existing models, to designing innovative platforms that contribute to the global standards.

2. Regulatory Harmonization: Creating Consistent Rules Across Africa

Central to the initiative is the establishment of a “Passport Licensing Regime” that enables virtual asset providers to operate seamlessly across African markets. “Sovereignty requires a harmonized architecture,” explained Beverley Agbakoba-Onyejianya. “By committing to a unified regulatory voice, we are transforming regulation into a competitive advantage.” 

 

The Accord will be submitted for consideration to the African Union Commission, the AfCFTA Secretariat, and various Central Banks across Africa, establishing a coordination approach to digital asset regulation.

3. Technology and Interoperability: Building Shared Digital Rails

The Accord introduces Version 1.0 of the African Virtual Asset Interoperability Standard (AVAIS), covering API standards and smart contract templates. The shared infrastructure ensures that all platforms can communicate and transact seamlessly. 

4. Capital and Talent Development: Attracting Investment and Training Professionals

This initiative recognizes that sustainable growth is only possible with financial resources and human capital. As a result, the Accord establishes a framework to attract institutional capital while developing a “Digital Asset Talent Corps” of 1,000 trained professionals. The de-risked ecosystem creates pathways for both investment and career development in Africa’s digital asset sector.

 

5. Monetary Sovereignty: Developing African Digital Currencies

At the foundation of the Accord is the imperative for builders to define and develop digital currency infrastructure that is not only resilient but also globally competitive, strategically keeping value within the continent, while ensuring accessibility, liquidity, and interoperability. Africa must commit to control its financial destiny. 

 

Adedeji Owonibi, a Trustee of VASPA who currently chairs the Steering Committee of the association, encourages builders to identify with the initiative, noting that “The Builders Accord arrives at a moment of need for extraordinary strategic regulatory convergence in Africa. I enjoin all builders on the continent to join.” 

A Historic Inflection Point for Sovereignty

Senator Ihenyen, current Executive Chair of the Steering Committee of VASPA observed that “in Africa, we have seen how fragmented, locally-focused strategies in the past yielded only temporary gains”. With the 2026 Builders Accord, “we are ensuring that African builders lead the design of the systems they use, moving from mere tokens to digital platforms and ecosystems that not only keep value within the continent, but also create lasting value for the globe”, he said.

 

Clearly, the emergence of virtual assets is not merely another technological wave but an innovation that Africa needs to leverage to transform its financial and economic infrastructure, “smartly safeguarding strategic sovereignty”, in the words of the VASPA leader. And VASPA is not afraid to help define and develop the much-needed bridge block by block, in collaboration with African builders.

 

Why African Builders Must Join

The Accord identifies a “Moment of Choice” for developers, founders, and virtual asset service providers across the continent. By joining the initiative, builders gain access to:


  • Interoperability Standards: Version 1.0 of the African Virtual Asset Interoperability Standard (AVAIS), including API standards, and smart contract templates. 
  • Global Posture Framework: Strategic guidance for building products that compete internationally. 
  • De-Risked Ecosystem: Entry into a coordinated environment that attracts institutional capital. 
  • Talent Development: Access to training programs and the Digital Asset Talent Corps. 
  • Regulatory Clarity: Participation in shaping harmonized regulations across the continent.

Collective Voice: Representation in discussions with the African Union Commission, AfCFTA Secretariat, and Central Banks.

A Call to Action: Join the Builders' Movement

As the journey towards 2027 begins, neutrality is itself a position. It’s an increasingly untenable one. Builders must choose: help define the emerging financial architecture, or navigate a landscape shaped entirely by external forces.

 

VASPA invites all virtual asset providers, fintech innovators, and digital asset builders across Africa to join this historic initiative. The Accord is more than a framework; it is a covenant for Africa’s economic future.

Are you a builder of the digital finance future in Africa?

Request a copy of the 2026 Builders Accord and explore endorsement opportunities by contacting VASPA via email.

About VASPA

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA), founded in September 2024 and headquartered in Nigeria, is the premier Africa-focused advocacy group for the virtual asset industry. Our mission is to foster innovation, harmonize regulation, and build a safe and thriving virtual asset ecosystem across the African continent. For more information about us, please visit our website, www.vaspa.org. To become a Patron or Partner of VASPA, visit our Membership page: https://vaspa.org/become-a-member/. VASPA also welcomes individual and corporate members.

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Abuja FCT, Nigeria — In a definitive nod to its growing authority and crucial coordinating role within the virtual asset sector, the Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) has been officially enlisted by the Nigerian government to be a part of the Virtual Assets Working Group to help steer the country’s ongoing National Risk Assessment (NRA).

Regulatory Alert: Help Shape the Future of Virtual Assets Regulation in Kenya

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) warmly congratulates the Securities and Exchange Commission of Ghana (SEC Ghana) on the official launch of its Virtual Asset Service Providers regulatory sandbox, announced on 10 March 2026 under Notice No. SEC/PR/001/03/2026. This announcement, made by virtue of the Virtual Asset Service Providers Act, 2025 (Act 1154), represents a defining moment not only for Ghana but for the broader African virtual asset landscape. It is a milestone for the ecosystem.

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VASPA: Call for Expression of Interest—Lead the Future of Virtual Assets in Africa https://vaspa.org/vaspa-leadership-call-for-expression-of-interest/ Fri, 30 Jan 2026 16:53:13 +0000 https://vaspa.org/?p=1910

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VASPA: Call for Expression of Interest—Lead the Future of Virtual Assets in Africa

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VASPA Africa

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VASPA Leadership_Call for Expression of Interest to Lead Africa
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Lead the Future of Africa's Vitual Asset Sector

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA), founded in September 2024 and headquartered in Nigeria, is entering its next phase of evolution. As the premier Africa-focused advocacy group for the virtual asset industry, our mission is to foster innovation, harmonize regulation, and build a safe and thriving virtual asset ecosystem across the African continent.

 

To achieve our Africa mandate, we are transitioning our leadership to a Pan-African structure. We are seeking visionary, volunteer-based leaders to join our team and represent the diverse interests of the African continent in a remote-work environment that encourages personal initiative, collaboration, and excellence.

Available Leadership Portfolios

We are inviting expressions of interest from seasoned professionals and industry players to fill the key roles available under our new structure which is a permanent, scalable framework that has been designed for experienced volunteers who understandably have limited time but high impact. Interested applicants should note that the roles listed below are voluntary positions, not salaried, operating within a budget system.

1.1. The Executive Council (The Drivers)

 

  • Executive Chair: Chief executive and primary liaison for high-level stakeholder relations, including local and international operators, regulators and other public agencies, and international bodies. Leads strategic direction, fosters partnerships, and represents the association. Drives growth, advocates for the virtual asset sector, and ensures the association’s impact in shaping Africa’s digital economy.
  • Executive Vice Chair (Operations & Governance): Supports operational efficiency, ensures effective governance, and oversees implementation of policies. Drives organizational effectiveness, risk management, and compliance in the association’s activities. Essentially acts as the “Chief of Staff” to ensure the association is running efficiently.

1.2. The Executive Council (The Leads)

 

  • Executive Leads
  1. Growth Lead: Oversees project and business management, driving revenue growth through strategic partnerships, sponsorships, membership subscriptions, and donations.
  2. Programs & Communications Lead: Combines programs with media and communications, handling brand management, press relations, social media, and visibility to boost the association’s impact.
  3. Policy & Regulatory Affairs Lead: Drives policy and regulatory engagement, lobbying, and manages VASPA’s Trust Seal. Shapes favorable policies, engages regulators, and ensures compliance, fostering a thriving virtual asset ecosystem in Africa.
  4. Funding & Partnerships Lead: Secures funding, builds strategic partnerships, and nurtures donor relationships to drive organizational growth and impact. Identifies opportunities, manages grants, and fosters collaborations to advance mission objectives.
  5. Regional Directors: We appoint 5 Regional Directors (North, South, East, West, and Central Africa). These are the “Boots on the Ground” responsible for local advocacy and membership growth.

Apart from the Annual General Meeting (AGM), the Executive Council meets quarterly, online or onsite.

2. The Secretariat (The Core)

  • Secretary-General: A highly organized senior professional managing international correspondence, documentation, and compliance.
  • Community Officer: Drives membership growth & engagement. Spearheads mobilization, registration, onboarding, orientation, and retention, while delivering value through conferences & exclusive benefits.
  • Financial Controller: A dedicated person for accountability and transparency, essential for financial records, financial health, and NGO credibility.

Apart from the AGM, the Secretariat meets bi-monthly (every 2 months), online or onsite.

 

3. Non-Executives (The Advisory & Trustees)

 

  • Advisers: Respected persons who endorse the association’s vision and mission, lending their influence and expertise to support the Executive Council. Apart from the AGM, the Board of Advisers meet half-yearly, online or onsite.
  • Trustees: Esteemed figures from within and beyond the virtual asset industry who share common values with the association, leveraging their expertise and reputation to ensure that the association achieves its mission and goals, providing strategic guidance, oversight, and support to the association, helping with governance, risk management, and stakeholder engagement, acting as custodians of the association, and giving strong backing to the association. Apart from the AGM, the Board of Trustees meet annually, online or onsite.

Why Lead with VASPA?

These are pro-bono or public interest, volunteer roles designed for high-impact individuals who want to shape the innovation and regulatory legacy of Africa’s digital economy. As a member of the Leadership Team, you will:

  • Influence Policy: Engage directly with innovators, regulators, policymakers in various parts of Africa.
  • Global Visibility: Represent the African industry at local and international forums, including summits and conferences.

Strategic Network: Collaborate with the continent’s leading founders and entrepreneurs, legal and compliance experts, and policy architects.

 

Who Should Apply?

We are looking for C-suite executives, legal practitioners, and policy experts currently active in the blockchain, fintech, or virtual asset space. Candidates must demonstrate:

 

  • a deep commitment to a regulated and inclusive African crypto-ecosystem;
  • the capacity to dedicate ~4 hours per month to strategic association work; and
  • a track record of high-integrity professional leadership.

How to Express Interest

If you are ready to lead Africa’s virtual asset future, please submit a brief Statement of Interest (max 300 words), your professional profile, and LinkedIn profile to us here

Deadline for Submission

27 February 2026. 

 

VASPA is an inclusive organization. We strongly encourage applications from across all 54 African nations to ensure true continental representation.

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NFIU Taps VASPA to Shape Nigeria’s National Risk Assessment on Virtual Assets

Abuja FCT, Nigeria — In a definitive nod to its growing authority and crucial coordinating role within the virtual asset sector, the Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) has been officially enlisted by the Nigerian government to be a part of the Virtual Assets Working Group to help steer the country’s ongoing National Risk Assessment (NRA).

Regulatory Alert: Help Shape the Future of Virtual Assets Regulation in Kenya

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) warmly congratulates the Securities and Exchange Commission of Ghana (SEC Ghana) on the official launch of its Virtual Asset Service Providers regulatory sandbox, announced on 10 March 2026 under Notice No. SEC/PR/001/03/2026. This announcement, made by virtue of the Virtual Asset Service Providers Act, 2025 (Act 1154), represents a defining moment not only for Ghana but for the broader African virtual asset landscape. It is a milestone for the ecosystem.

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VASPA Hosts Inaugural Builders Mastermind Lunch: Industry Leaders Draft 2026 Builders Accord for Global Competitiveness https://vaspa.org/vaspa-inaugural-builders-mastermind-lunch-2026-builders-accord/ Sun, 25 Jan 2026 17:16:41 +0000 https://vaspa.org/?p=1880

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VASPA Hosts Inaugural Builders Mastermind Lunch: Industry Leaders Draft 2026 Builders Accord for Global Competitiveness

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VASPA Africa

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VASPA Hosts Inaugural Builders Mastermind Lunch_Industry Leaders Draft 2026 Builders Accord
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Introduction

On December 10, 2025, the Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) convened a select group of industry leaders in the fintech and virtual asset space under the Chatham House Rule to discuss the future of the African VASP landscape. The objective of this meeting was to develop the 2026 Builders Accord, a coordinated action plan to de-risk, scale, and secure the ecosystem.  

 

Participants acknowledged that Africa has significant potential and is at a critical point in the global digital economy. How then can this potential be translated into a more robust and integrated digital asset market? 

 

In answering this question, it was identified that the African virtual asset ecosystem faces an existential threat that stems from several factors. 

The Problem

The participants identified parallels between the VASP industry and the B2C market. Rather than aligning with the B2B fintech space, the VASP sector is treading the B2C path. This isn’t exactly great news, because, unlike in B2B, where local players dominate in Africa due to high entry barriers requiring institutional trust and credibility, B2C is captured by foreign-backed entities with massive capital advantages. A dynamic that might play out in the VASP industry if we do nothing about our current situation. 

 

A speaker opined that the problem local VASPs face isn’t a lack of capital, but rather unpreparedness to capture this funding. The problem is the absence of credible, well-constructed investment opportunities that demonstrate clear value creation and scalable returns. It was projected that local operators have a limited yet crucial window of approximately two years to solidify their market position, or foreign firms will utilize the waiting capital. 

Pillars for Strategic Resilience

The Builders Mastermind developed a strategy to address the threats facing the African VASP sector, anchoring it on three key pillars that form the foundation of the 2026 Builders Accord:

A Global Vision and Real Utility

It was said that the African ecosystem needs to evolve beyond on-ramp/off-ramp arbitrage models—something a speaker described as “echo chambers of speculation”. Instead, builders should look at the bigger picture and seek to use the technology to solve real continental issues. The mandate is to find tangible use cases for blockchain technology, including infrastructure development, housing solutions and cross-border trade finance. 

Founders were urged to defocus fixation on the local market and embrace a vision that positions their companies to compete internationally alongside the world’s largest virtual asset firms.

A Unified, Global Regulatory Framework

The existing regulatory landscape is fragmented. There are conflicting mandates among several agencies, including the SEC, CBN, and tax authorities, and questions about what virtual assets should be treated as—securities, currencies, or taxable properties? 

 

The country needs a unified SEC-led regulatory authority for virtual assets. While the SEC might be the primary regulatory body, it should coordinate formally with the CBN on monetary policy matters and with other relevant agencies on their respective mandates. This approach, similar to Singapore’s model, would provide companies with a single point of accountability and clear, consistent rules. 

 

As speakers emphasized, stable regulatory frameworks will promote market growth, while conflicting authorities will stifle innovation and give foreign competitors undue advantage in an emerging industry that needs a level playing ground for operators. 

Ecosystem Talent Investment

The world of virtual assets seems like a whole other universe. From the lingo to the technology, it is something the average person would not easily grasp, and there seems to be a gleefulness around hoarding this knowledge.

However, the lack of specialized blockchain knowledge outside the immediate VASP sector can paralyze mainstream adoption. If external institutions, including banks and regulatory bodies, cannot hire professionals who understand the technology and compliance, they will not build on it. In addition, reliance on expensive, scarce talent or on the expectation that foreign players will train local talent represents a short-sighted approach that will impede growth and leave the door open to external dominance with limited impact on the local economy. This is not sustainable.

For sustainability, participants stressed the need for the entire ecosystem to take on the responsibility of mainstreaming knowledge of the technology and the industry in general across sectors. 

The 2026 Builders Accord: A Continental Blueprint

The result of the Builders Mastermind session is the comprehensive and time-sensitive 2026 Builders Accord, structured around five focus areas. They include the following:

 

  • Strategic posture (build globally competitive products)
  • Regulatory harmonization (create consistent rules across Africa)
  • Technology & interoperability (build shared digital rails that all platforms can run on)
  • Capital & talent development (attract investment and train skilled professionals) 
  • Monetary sovereignty (develop African digital currencies)

Key Insights from the Dialogue

Beyond the formal Accord, the session surfaced several critical insights on the realities of the VASP ecosystem and the way forward. 

On capital formation:

The narrative that capital is scarce is false. Investors, in fact, have more money than credible opportunities. The real constraints are weak customer insights among founders, regulatory incoherence, talent gaps, and copycat entrepreneurship rather than problem-solving.

On stablecoins and sovereignty:

Speakers highlighted that Africa’s sole reliance on foreign-currency-pegged stablecoins represents a geopolitical vulnerability. What the ecosystem needs is its own globally competitive stablecoins. But to avoid isolation, such stablecoins must be locally connected but globally tradable, with real market activity. Anything less will result in the fragmentation of multiple competing local stablecoins that lack substantial utility, technical robustness, and global distribution. This will, logically, prevent any from achieving scale. 

On regulatory leadership:

 The fintech sector’s success in Africa particularly was attributed not just to innovation, but to consistent, unified ecosystem leadership that engaged Central Banks and other relevant regulators with a coordinated voice. The virtual asset industry may require the same level of strategic engagement.

On interoperability:

The continental scale requires building interoperable platforms capable of powering intra-Africa digital asset transactions. The challenge is not the underlying technology, but how products are positioned and communicated to users who care about the naira, rand, cedi, and KES, not the blockchain powering them. 

Conclusion

The Builders Mastermind Lunch underscored the need for the Africa VASP ecosystem to play the right cards this year and the next, since the window for local players might be closing. Cohesive execution can clear the path to the survival, prosperity and global relevance of the 2026 Builders Accord principles. It will shift the focus from local competition to a place on the global stage through unified visions, regulatory harmonization, and proactive talent development. 

Have you received a copy of the draft '2026 Builders Accord'?

Elevate with your first quarter regulatory playbook. Request a copy by sending us a message here.  

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NFIU Taps VASPA to Shape Nigeria’s National Risk Assessment on Virtual Assets

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SEC’s Revised Minimum Capital for VASPs and the Global Capital Gauntlet: Is Nigeria Pricing Itself Out of the Crypto Future? https://vaspa.org/secs-revised-minimum-capital-vasps-global-capital-gauntlet-nigeria/ https://vaspa.org/secs-revised-minimum-capital-vasps-global-capital-gauntlet-nigeria/#comments Tue, 20 Jan 2026 07:45:01 +0000 https://vaspa.org/?p=1831

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SEC’s Revised Minimum Capital for VASPs and the Global Capital Gauntlet: Is Nigeria Pricing Itself Out of the Crypto Future?

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Senator Ihenyen

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SEC’s Revised Minimum Capital for VASPs and the Global Capital Gauntlet
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A Startling Picture

​As the early dust settles on the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Nigeria’s Circular No. 26-1—a document that sets out new minimum capital for capital market operators (CMOs) in Nigeria—a startling picture is emerging. With virtual asset service providers (VASPs) now included as CMOs, a comparative analysis of global digital asset regulations reveals that Nigeria’s new ₦2 billion ($1.4 million) capital requirement for Digital Asset Exchanges (DAXs) isn’t just high—it is among the most prohibitive in the world. Potentially, this stifles the very local capacity and resilience the government should be proactively supporting to ensure Nigeria’s global competitiveness in this emerging market.

The Great Disconnect: Nigeria vs. The World

​When placed side-by-side with established global hubs, Nigeria’s “capital muscle” approach appears less like a protective cushion and more like a barrier to entry.

 

Jurisdiction

Licensing Category

Min. Capital Requirement (Approx. USD)

European Union (MiCA 2026)

Crypto-Asset Service Provider (CASP)

$54,000–$163,000 (€50k – €150k)

Hong Kong (SFC)

Virtual Asset Trading Platform (VATP)

$640,000 (HKD 5M paid-up)

Mauritius / El Salvador

VASP / DASP

Varies (Highly Competitive/Low)

South Africa 

Financial Services Conduct Authority (FSCA)

No specific minimum mandated (based on financial soundness & liquidity)

Nigeria (SEC 2026)

Digital Asset Exchange (DAX)

$1,400,000 (₦2 Billion)

In the European Union, under the landmark Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework, a firm can secure a license to operate across 27 countries for a fraction of what it costs to launch in Nigeria alone. While the SEC argues that these funds ensure “resilience,” I believe—and so do many stakeholders—that Nigeria’s market, while high in adoption, is still in a nascent stage regarding institutional depth.

Analytical Insight: The Capacity Conundrum

The core of the industry’s grievance is echoed collectively, in one voice, in the public statement issued by the Blockchain Industry Coordinating Committee of Nigeria (BICCoN)—the intercommunity voice of Nigeria’s blockchain industry. The message is that at this nascent stage of the virtual asset industry, Nigeria presently lacks the strong local capacity to compete globally if the entry bar is set at an institutional level from day one. Three major concerns cannot be wished away:

Stifling Homegrown 'Unicorns'

By demanding $1.4 million in paid-up capital, the SEC is effectively looking for finished products rather than fostering growth. Most of the world’s biggest exchanges started “small” and became big. In Nigeria, the “small” innovator will become legally extinct.

The "Foreign Giant" Advantage

The high threshold creates a red carpet for well-funded foreign entities while the local innovators who also possess the technical “know-how” but lack liquid billions are sidelined. This risks a future where Nigeria’s digital economy is owned entirely by external players.

Capital Intensity vs. Market Reality

Unlike traditional financial institutions or CMOs, crypto startups are technology-first. They require capital for R&D and security, not necessarily for sitting in a dormant “paid-up” account. This is why virtually forcing $1.4 million to sit idle is, for many, a “capital death sentence.”

Premature and Commercially Unjustifiable

If Nigeria were a developed financial market like New York or London, a $1.4 million floor might be justifiable. But for an emerging ecosystem, it feels like a mismatch. In fact, it is rather premature—a global disparity that even the “foreign giants” may consider unviable, and consequently explore other markets. Regulators need to understand this economic reality. A well-intended policy, such as the one in question, can lead to unintended consequences. Nigeria needs to find a constructive path forward.


A Constructive Path Forward

To build a truly competitive industry, the SEC needs to consider a tiered licensing model, through and through:

Tier 1 (Startup)

Lower capital requirements for firms with limited transaction volumes

Tier 2 (Growth)

Graduated increases as the firm scales

Tier 3 (Institutional)

The full ₦2 billion for exchanges handling massive public retail volumes

The same tiered principle above could then be applied to other categories of licensing as well. This approach will help us develop the market while minimizing risks and threats, not stifle it with overburdening capital requirements, however unintended.

These points resonate with Nigeria’s industry associations and bodies, emphasizing the need for policymakers to truly listen. Mutual cooperation, collaboration, and inclusive consultation in policy and regulatory decision-making are not only key to developing and protecting markets that benefit the nation, but also laying a solid foundation for mutual trust and seamless industry compliance.

Closing Thoughts

Without such a ladder, as laid above, Nigeria risks winning the “stability” battle but losing the “innovation” war. By the time the June 2027 deadline arrives, we may find ourselves with a “stable” market but one with no local players—or even adequate foreign giants—left to run it.

 

If regulation truly serves consumers and investors, not bureaucrats or red tape, Nigeria should create a globally competitive environment where users can access cutting-edge financial innovations.

 

In my professional work, particularly through my work with VASPA, I am closely tracking regulatory progress in Kenya, South Africa, and Ghana, and I’m keenly aware that Nigeria must get this right to stay competitive. As adoption takes shape and markets evolve, regulation is shifting from restrictive enforcement to more developmental approaches. And as time ticks by, opportunity costs mount, further closing up Nigeria’s limited window to act. In the coming weeks, I look forward to working with other stakeholders to explore available channels for consultation with operators in the virtual assets industry, the SEC, and other relevant agencies and regulators, aiming for collaborative solutions that benefit the country. If you are a VASP and would like to endorse VASPA’s letter to support our special advocacy program concerning this issue,

talk to us.

 

Senator Ihenyen is the Lead Partner at Infusion Lawyers and currently serves as the Executive Chair of the Steering Committee, Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA). Email: [email protected]

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Abuja FCT, Nigeria — In a definitive nod to its growing authority and crucial coordinating role within the virtual asset sector, the Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) has been officially enlisted by the Nigerian government to be a part of the Virtual Assets Working Group to help steer the country’s ongoing National Risk Assessment (NRA).

Regulatory Alert: Help Shape the Future of Virtual Assets Regulation in Kenya

The Virtual Asset Service Providers Association (VASPA) warmly congratulates the Securities and Exchange Commission of Ghana (SEC Ghana) on the official launch of its Virtual Asset Service Providers regulatory sandbox, announced on 10 March 2026 under Notice No. SEC/PR/001/03/2026. This announcement, made by virtue of the Virtual Asset Service Providers Act, 2025 (Act 1154), represents a defining moment not only for Ghana but for the broader African virtual asset landscape. It is a milestone for the ecosystem.

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