Amazon among five companies to develop digital euro prototype for the ECB

Quick Take

  • The European Central Bank has revealed its selected partners to collaborate on the digital euro prototype.
  • Amazon will be responsible for designing e-commerce payments.
  • The prototyping exercise will take place between September and December 2022.

The European Central Bank (ECB) announced the selection of five new partners to support the development of a digital euro prototype.

Each of the companies will take on a different role in putting together the prototype. Among them is the tech giant Amazon, which will be responsible for developing e-commerce payments within the project.

Spanish bank CaixaBank will develop online peer-to-peer payments for a mobile application, while the French multinational payment service, Worldline, is responsible for the offline version.

Point of sale payments from the payer and payee are in the hands of the ECB-backed European Payment Initiative and the Italian paytech company, Nexi, respectively. 

The ECB opened a call for partners at the end of  April and received 54 respondents from the likes of national banks and multinational tech firms. The five chosen service providers were selected based on their compliance to “specific capabilities” which were an advantage on top of the basic criteria required. 

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The prototyping exercise is set to begin within the month of September and finish at the end of December.

This process forms part of an ongoing investigation phase spanning over two years. The ECB expects to complete this phase by March 2023 by evaluating the prototypes produced as well as the success of the collaboration between the partners. 

The ECB launched its investigation into the digital euro in July 2021, without promising that it would issue the digital currency at the end. 


© 2023 The Block. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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About Author

Inbar is a reporter covering crypto policy and regulation with a focus on Europe. Before The Block, she worked with several publications in Brussels including The Parliament Magazine and Are We Europe. Inbar holds a bachelor's degree in international relations from University College Utrecht and a master's degree in international politics from KU Leuven.