Aptos will become the verification backbone for a sovereign nation’s access to global climate markets.
The Republic of Chad, a country in Central Africa, has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Luxembourg-based environmental technology company Xange.com to deploy digital infrastructure for climate monitoring and verification across the country.
Verified climate data will be anchored on the Aptos blockchain, making it the layer of trust that gives Chad’s ecological assets credibility on the international stage.
Why Aptos is central to this deal
When Chad generates a carbon credit, the data behind it must be verifiable by international buyers and climate finance institutions. That’s where Aptos comes into the picture.
Each mitigation result verified through Xange.com’s systems will be recorded on Aptos through the Immutable Metadata Digital Certifications, tamper-resistant digital documents that provide a permanent, auditable trail for each climate asset.
Aptos was chosen for its speed, processing transactions with sub-second finality, and an audit trail built to meet the standards of international treaty bodies and climate finance institutions.
In simple words, when Chad launches a carbon credit, any buyer anywhere in the world can instantly and transparently verify the data behind it.
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What the Agreement Gains for Chad
Chad has significant natural resources, forests, wetlands and landscapes that can generate internationally tradable carbon credits. The missing piece has always been the infrastructure to verify and record these assets in a way that international markets will accept.
The MoU fills this gap through three capabilities. A national real-time monitoring system monitors environmental conditions throughout Chad’s territory, including warnings of wildfires and extreme weather events.
The end-to-end market infrastructure manages the entire process from creating a carbon credit to settling a transaction, including a national registry. And the Aptos authentication layer ensures that every item produced contains a credible, cryptographically secured record.
“Chad has significant sovereign environmental assets. What is missing is the infrastructure to verify, register and bring these assets to international markets,” said Esteban van Goor, CEO and founder of Xange.com.
“This agreement gives Chad the tools to move from potential to participation and realize the full value of mitigation outcomes under the Paris Agreement.”
A new frontier for blockchain in climate finance
Article 6.2 of the Paris Agreement allows countries to trade verified emissions reductions across borders, allowing wealthier countries and companies to finance climate action in developing countries in exchange for internationally recognized carbon credits. For Chad, this agreement opens up a market that was inaccessible due to a lack of credible verification infrastructure.
For Aptos, the deal extends its blockchain into sovereign climate finance, one of the fastest growing applications for blockchain technology in the real world.
