Canadian Blockchain Project to Assist Mongolian Nomadic Farmers Fight Income Instability

Convergence.tech, a Toronto-based digital transformation company, has finished a blockchain-powered project aimed at assisting Mongolian nomadic farmers in maximizing returns on their cashmere product. 

Betakit reported on Jan. 8 that Convergence.tech deployed an Ethereum-based traceability platform called “Backbone” to assist the cashmere herders in eradicating income instability. 

The farmers also face challenges, such as the lack of agreement on sustainability and chain of custody processes. Additionally, they are usually indebted to intermediaries for cash advances.

Registration of cashmere bales via blockchain-enabled mobile application

The objective of the blockchain-powered sustainability supply chain project is to assist the Mongolian nomadic farmers in certifying and tracking their cashmere products through Backbone. Moreover, it is being conducted with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP).

Farmers will be required to register their cashmere bales via a mobile application developed by Convergence.tech. Packing slips and bales will also be fitted with radio-frequency identification tags for traceability purposes. 

From the pilot project, users viewed cashmere’s critical path in the supply chain. Backbone also availed sustainability and environmental impact data needed in the facilitation of ethical raw cashmere. 

Chami Akmeemana, Convergence.tech CEO said, “The nomadic community is one of immense pride but one with a volatile and unstable income.” 

He added, “Leveraging blockchain technology within the transformation of the cashmere industry can provide numerous benefits for Mongolian herders, buyers, and sellers alike.”

By utilizing blockchain technology, Mongolian nomadic farmers will be able to trace cashmere from produce to market, prompting income stability. As a result, their living standards will be improved. 

Akmeemana acknowledged, “Our learnings are pretty significant on this. […] And that’s why everything was around watching from afar, but now that that’s completed we’ve been going around the world. We were in Singapore and Bangkok a couple of weeks ago presenting to the UN, USAID (the United States Agency for International Development), the World Bank, et cetera. So now we’re going to start seeing a lot more applications coming out.”

Nomadic farmers have to tackle the reality of dwindling grazing lands. Convergence.tech seeks to assist Mongolian nomadic farmers in handling this problem through blockchain-powered solutions. 

Image via Shutterstock

Solana Wallet Developer Cashmere Raises $3M in Seed Funding

Solana’s enterprise wallet developer Cashmere announced on August 9 that it has raised $3 million in seed funding at a $30 million valuation.

According to Cashmere, participation in the fundraising included Y Combinator, Coinbase Venture, VoltCapital Project Serum, and Global Founders Capital.

Cashmere is a company focused on providing Crypto wallets on Solana blockchain for web3 startups. Designed to help companies store their crypto assets securely, protecting assets even if “hot” wallets like Solana-based Phantom or Slope are compromised.

A hot wallet is a wallet that runs on computers, mobile phones, and other devices that can be connected to the Internet.

The funds raised will be used to accelerate the development of the company’s product “CashmereWallet”. It will also be used to expand the talent team to launch a premium product later this year.

Additionally, the wallet appears to be designed so that companies can co-manage the wallet using multi-signature.

Cashmere said its wallet supports multi-signature. According to its statement, it allows companies to require multiple wallets to approve transactions, which enhances the security of enterprise wallets and eliminates a single point of failure, resulting in a more secure self-custody option.

Last week, a bug in the Solana-related wallet SlopeWallet led to a hack that affected the entire Solana ecosystem. At least 9,000 addresses and at least $6 million were stolen.

In the future, with more and more services using encrypted assets, how users can safely protect their assets will become an important issue.

“We built Cashmere to offer Solana users institutional-grade security without having to rely on cold storage solutions,” said Cashmere co-founder Shashank Khanna.

The cold wallet is considered to be one of the safest cryptocurrency storage methods at present. The reason is that a cold wallet is a cryptocurrency wallet that is not connected to the network, so the risk of being hacked is much smaller. Wallets can also be called offline wallets or hardware wallets.

But for a business or institution, cold storage means using an external drive, which is very difficult to operate.

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