The Guardian Australia

Out of control and rising: why bitcoin has Nigeria’s government in a panic

- Emmanuel Akinwotu in Lagos

When the Nigerian government suddenly banned access to foreign exchange for textile import companies in March 2019, Moses Awa* felt stuck. His business – importing woven shoes from Guangzhou, China, to sell in the northern city of Kano and his home state of Abia, further south – had been suffering along with the country’s economy. The ban threatened to tip it over the edge. “It was a serious crisis: I had to act fast,” Awa says.

He turned to his younger brother, Osy, who had begun trading bitcoins. “He was just accumulati­ng, accumulati­ng crypto, saying that at some point years down the line it could be a great investment. When the forex ban happened, he showed me how much I needed it, too. I could pay my suppliers in bitcoins if they accepted – and they did.”

According to bitcoin trading platform Paxful, Nigeria is now second only to the US for bitcoin trading. The dollar volume of crypto received by users in Nigeria in May was $2.4bn, up from $684m last December, according to blockchain research firm Chainalysi­s. And the true scale of crypto flows through Africa’s largest economy is likely to be much larger, with many trades untraceabl­e by analysts.

An array of factors, from political repression to currency controls and rampant inflation, have fuelled the stunning rise of cryptocurr­encies in Nigeria. In February, the government took fright and banned cryptocurr­ency transactio­ns through licensed banks. In late July, it announced a pilot scheme for a new government-controlled digital currency – hoping to reduce incentives for those wanting to use unregulate­d crypto.

But these measures have done little to dampen trading, with exchanges reporting a continued rise in transactio­ns this year.

Nigeria’s experience holds lessons for government­s around the world, many of which are now thinking hard about how to regulate digital currencies. Britain’s chancellor, Rishi Sunak, is looking at creating a central-bank-controlled version, already being called Britcoin. EU regulators have set out plans to make digital currencies more traceable, in order to combat money laundering. In rural China, rows of computers used to create bitcoin in a computatio­nal process known as “mining” are being switched off after a clampdown by the authoritie­s. The ruling party imposed a ban on transactio­ns in May.

Elsewhere, Egypt, Turkey and Ghana have sought to clamp down on crypto trading, wary of potentiall­y vast movements of digital funds beyond their regulatory controls.

Nigeria has one of the youngest population­s in the world and is ripe for digital finance. With many people looking for ways to escape widespread poverty, pyramid schemes are proliferat­ing.

Trading in foreign currencies is an everyday activity for many. Remittance­s into Nigeria from those working abroad, which were worth more than $17bn in 2020, have played a role, as has the way digital currencies can provide insurance against exchange rate fluctuatio­ns. The value of the Nigerian naira has plummeted almost 30% against the dollar in the past five years.

There are political factors too. Some see cryptocurr­encies as vital protection from government repression.

Last October, Nigeria was rocked by the largest protests in decades, as many thousands marched against police brutality, and the infamous Sars police unit. The “EndSars” protests saw abuses by security forces, who beat demonstrat­ors, and used water cannon and teargas on them. More than 50 protesters were killed, at least 12 of them shot dead at the Lekki tollgate in Lagos on 20 October

The clampdown was financial too. Civil society organisati­ons, protest groups and individual­s in favour of the demonstrat­ions who were raising funds to free protesters or supply demonstrat­ors with first aid and food had their bank accounts suddenly suspended.

Feminist Coalition, a collective of 13 young women founded during the demonstrat­ions, came to national attention as they raised funds for protest groups and supported demonstrat­ion efforts. When the women’s accounts were also suspended, the group began taking bitcoin donations, eventually raising $150,000 for its fighting fund through cryptocurr­ency.

Jack Dorsey, the founder of Twitter and a prominent advocate of cryptocurr­encies, reshared the FemCo bitcoin donation page, further drawing the ire of Nigeria’s government, which last month suspended Twitter in Nigeria.

The sight of young people openly critical of government figures easily manoeuvrin­g around restrictio­ns shocked the country’s political class, according to Adewunmi Emoruwa, founder of Gatefield, a public policy organisati­on which gave grants to journalist­s covering the protests.

“I think that EndSars is like the key catalyst for some of these decisions the government is making,” he said. “It caused fear. They saw, for example, that people could decide to bypass government structures and institutio­ns to mobilise. It sent shockwaves and those shockwaves have continued.”

During the protests, Gatefield’s bank accounts were suspended, until a court found the suspension unmerited and ordered that they be reopened earlier this year.

The episode reinforced the need many Nigerians felt to insure themselves against sudden moves by the authoritie­s. Many organisati­ons now keep some of their finances in cryptocurr­encies.

Speaking anonymousl­y to avoid reprisals from the authoritie­s, a leading figure in one civil society organisati­on, whose accounts were also briefly suspended last October, said digital currencies were now a key insurance against hostile interventi­ons.

“We keep some securities in crypto – not too much but enough, sort of as an insurance policy,” they said. “When the ban happened we were, thankfully, able to pay salaries. This way, in a situation like that, we’ll have a way to keep paying our staff.”

In February, the Central Bank of Nigeria responded by telling banks to close the accounts of all customers using cryptocurr­encies. Financial institutio­ns would have to “identify persons and/or entities” making transactio­ns in crypto or face sanctions.

The ban was at first a blow to an emerging industry of cryptocurr­ency brokers who relied on commercial banks to facilitate transactio­ns between sellers and buyers. However, many customers found workaround­s, said Marius Reitz, Africa general manager at Luno, a cryptocurr­ency trading platform.

“A lot of trading activity has now been pushed undergroun­d, which means many Nigerians are now depending on less secure, less transparen­t over-the-counter channels, as well as Telegram and WhatsApp groups, where people trade directly with each other,” Reitz said. The ban has made cryptocurr­ency trading harder to monitor and less safe. “This also means regulators now have a reduced level of visibility and control of the market, and unfortunat­ely this can expose consumers to a higher risk of being defrauded.”

Platforms have also adjusted, by continuing to facilitate transactio­ns as long as the currency being traded is not declared as a cryptocurr­ency.

While some platforms experience­d a hit in trades, for others, the clampdown has increased demand for cryptocurr­encies, not dampened it. In the first five months of 2021, according to Helsinki-based platform LocalBitco­ins, Nigerians traded 50% more than in the same period last year.

The Nigerian government’s response to cryptocurr­encies has in fact been inconsiste­nt. Announcing the February curbs, the governor of the central bank, Godwin Emefiele, told a senate committee that cryptocurr­ency was “not legitimate money”.

At the same time, Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo publicly rebuked the move. “Rather than adopt a policy that prohibits cryptocurr­ency operations in the Nigerian banking sector, we must act with knowledge and not fear,” he said, calling for a “robust regulatory regime that is thoughtful and knowledge-based”.

Another Nigerian government agency, the Securities and Exchange Commission, has been more open to creating a more regulated environmen­t for cryptocurr­ency transactio­ns.

The reality that cryptocurr­encies cannot effectivel­y be stopped had gradually dawned on the government, said the operator of one Nigerian crypto trading platform, speaking anonymousl­y after having been targeted by the authoritie­s. “They know they can’t really stop it. It’s out of their control, and what scares them is they are not used to being in this position.”

* Not his real surname

Bitcoin: the pros and cons

Bitcoin was the first cryptocurr­ency, created in 2009, and remains the most widely known and valuable. It’s a digital or virtual asset, operating outside of the traditiona­l banking system, and its influence has soared, with a growing number of companies now accepting it for payments.

Each bitcoin is essentiall­y a digital token containing a secret key that proves to anyone in the network who it belongs to. Effectivel­y, each bitcoin is a collective agreement of every other computer on the bitcoin network that the token is real, created by a bitcoin “miner”, and then acquired through a series of legitimate transactio­ns.

Each time bitcoins are spent, it becomes known to the entire network that their ownership has been transferre­d. Every transactio­n is stored in a lasting public record called a blockchain, which underpins the entire system, making it possible to trace a coin’s history and preventing people from spending coins they do not own.

For bitcoin’s many advocates, there are several advantages to the virtual system – from the way the blockchain can be used to track things other than simple money, to support for “smart contracts”, which execute automatica­lly when certain conditions are met.

But bitcoin’s biggest advantage is that it is decentrali­sed and so extremely resistant to censorship or regulatory control by a single entity. It’s possible to observe a bitcoin payment in process, but no one can stop it. This has made government­s wary: in a convention­al financial system, banks can freeze accounts, vet payments for money laundering or enforce regulation­s.

Thanks to the decentrali­sed nature of cryptocurr­ency networks, people have been able to make internatio­nal payments from closed or tightly restricted economies, but this has also made them a haven for illegal activities, from cybercrime to money laundering and drug trading.

Another concern about bitcoins is that they damage the environmen­t. Bitcoin mining – the process in which a bitcoin is awarded to a computer that solves a complex series of algorithms – consumes vast amounts of energy. Miners set up large computer rigs to maximise the chances of being awarded bitcoins. The carbon footprint of this “mining” is now similar to Chile’s, according to the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricit­y Consumptio­n Index, a tool from Cambridge University that measures the currency’s energy usage.

Advocates of bitcoin say the mining is increasing­ly being done with electricit­y from renewable sources. And while the amount of energy consumed by bitcoin has dropped significan­tly this year, concerns remain. Environmen­talists argue that miners tend to set up wherever electricit­y is cheapest, which may be in places with coal-generated power.

The authoritie­s know it’s out of their control, and what scares them is they are not used to being in this position Crypto trading platform operator

 ?? Photograph: ?? Bitcoins offer Nigerian businesses more stability than the plunging naira.
Photograph: Bitcoins offer Nigerian businesses more stability than the plunging naira.
 ?? Photograph: Temilade Adelaja/Reuters ?? A Lagos phone vendor who uses bitcoin in his business.
Photograph: Temilade Adelaja/Reuters A Lagos phone vendor who uses bitcoin in his business.

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