
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), under the “Project Acacia” framework, completed 19 real financial transactions using infrastructure based on Hedera distributed ledger technology. This pilot was jointly launched by the RBA and the Digital Finance CRC in July 2025, exploring 24 tokenization use cases covering bonds, trade finance, and other asset-backed transactions.
Hedera plays a key infrastructural role in this pilot, with technical features that align closely with the core needs of central banks for financial infrastructure. Hedera uses an energy-efficient Proof of Stake (PoS) consensus mechanism, which has significantly lower energy consumption compared to Proof of Work (PoW), while supporting low-cost, high-scalability transaction processing.
This characteristic is especially critical for central bank scenarios that require compliance with regulations, cost control, and high throughput. By running 19 real transactions on Hedera infrastructure, the RBA provides a concrete example of how tokenized assets operate within traditional financial frameworks, fundamentally different from previous central bank blockchain explorations that remained at white papers or theoretical simulations.
Project Acacia systematically explored 24 tokenization application scenarios, covering some of the most representative asset classes in financial markets:
Bond Tokenization: Issuing and settling traditional fixed-income assets as digital tokens on the blockchain, aiming to reduce clearing delays and intermediary costs.
Trade Finance: Using tokenization technology to enhance transparency and automation in cross-border trade finance processes, shortening settlement cycles.
Other Asset-Backed Transactions: Covering various traditional financial assets, testing the applicability and reliability of tokenization across a broader range of asset classes.
This extensive use case coverage not only validates Hedera’s multi-scenario adaptability but also helps the RBA gather firsthand data to identify potential challenges before broader application.
The most compelling aspect of this pilot is that the RBA chose to use real funds and assets, rather than a sandbox simulation environment. Project Acacia also examined issues beyond technical feasibility, including operational process adjustments and regulatory framework compatibility, providing a basis for evaluating systemic challenges before wider adoption.
Analysts note that other central banks worldwide are closely watching Australia’s efforts, as it offers a concrete example of using real funds to validate tokenization technology within a controlled regulatory environment. Such pilots are often necessary precursors for financial innovation technologies to enter broader markets. However, scaling from pilot to systemic adoption will require ongoing progress across regulatory frameworks, cross-market interoperability, and industry willingness to adopt.
What is Project Acacia, and how is it related to Hedera?
Project Acacia is a blockchain pilot launched jointly by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and the Digital Finance CRC in July 2025, utilizing Hedera’s distributed ledger technology infrastructure to explore the application of tokenized assets in real financial transactions. It covers 24 use cases and has completed 19 real transactions.
Why is Hedera’s technology suitable for central bank-level financial applications?
Hedera uses an energy-efficient Proof of Stake (PoS) consensus mechanism, offering low cost and high scalability, along with enterprise-grade security and stability. It can handle high-throughput financial transactions while maintaining regulatory compliance, which are core considerations for central banks evaluating blockchain infrastructure.
How does this pilot differ fundamentally from previous central bank blockchain research?
The key difference is that the RBA used real funds and assets to complete 19 transactions, rather than remaining at simulation or white paper stages. This approach directly verifies the operational reliability of tokenization technology in real financial environments, providing other financial institutions with valuable firsthand data for reference.