The European Central Bank has green‑lit a pioneering dual‑track framework to enable settlement of transactions on distributed ledger technology platforms using central bank money. The Governing Council’s initiative combines a short‑term pilot, dubbed Pontes, scheduled to interface DLT platforms with TARGET Services by the end of the third quarter of 2026, and a longer‑term initiative, Appia, which seeks to establish a future‑proof global DLT infrastructure.
Pontes represents the near‑term goal: creating a secure link between existing DLT platforms and the Eurosystem’s TARGET services—namely TARGET2, T2S and TIPS—through a unified Eurosystem solution. It builds directly on exploratory work carried out between May and November 2024, where 64 participants explored over 50 experimental setups that used intraday escrow and liquidity tokens. The ECB has indicated its intention to invite expressions of interest from the market to join Pontes’ pilot phase, expected to commence by Q3 2026.
The longer‑term Appia track explores integration of DLT in a broader ecosystem, extending into global payment and securities infrastructures. This initiative aims to support international use cases such as cross‑border foreign exchange settlements and compliance with global standards, collaborating with public and private sector stakeholders to assess interoperability, scalability and legal frameworks.
During the 2024 discovery phase, experiments featured diverse approaches, including trials led by the Banque de France and Banca d’Italia. These trials used escrow-based intraday liquidity provision mechanisms that participants later advocated to evolve into overnight capabilities, shedding light on liquidity management inefficiencies. Officials noted the potential for simultaneous settlement and collateral automation to cut credit and liquidity risks, while potentially reducing operational costs.
Piero Cipollone, a member of the ECB’s Executive Board, remarked that although DLT and tokenisation remain nascent, they “are likely to offer new ways of improving the settlement of financial transactions.” He emphasised that the dual‑track approach serves innovation while maintaining security and efficiency in financial market infrastructure.
Pontes and Appia will operate under dedicated market contact groups. The ECB intends to outfit each with analysts and market participants to ensure operational robustness and collect stakeholder feedback as integration proceeds. With Pontes launching a Q3 2026 pilot, the ECB is concurrently reviewing additional trial proposals for integration within existing TARGET services frameworks.
The initiatives support the Eurosystem’s wider ambition to modernise wholesale settlement systems. Appia is envisioned as an evolution towards integrated ecosystems that support global operations and stimulate interoperability with other jurisdictions, thereby elevating Europe’s position in the digital infrastructure space.
European authorities have signalled enduring commitment to innovation since experimental work in 2024. The report released today, aligned with Pontes and Appia’s dual‑track launch, highlights how central banks across the continent are balancing emerging technologies with systemic resilience goals—managing legal, technical and liquidity implications harmoniously.
Market analysts believe the Pontes initiative addresses immediate demand from DLT innovators for central bank money settlement in familiar frameworks, while Appia opens the door to more ambitious, globally interoperable DLT ecosystems. Senior banking figures in Frankfurt have described the move as a “critical turning point” in central banks embracing digital transformation to reduce transaction costs and boost cross-border efficiency across Europe.
The ECB’s decision signals readiness to bridge traditional financial infrastructure with blockchain-based innovations without compromising safety or oversight. Through Pontes, the Eurosystem seeks to preserve market standards for liquidity and settlement, building confidence among banks and fintechs in central bank money λ integration. Appia, in turn, presents a vision of digital finance aligned with evolving global regulation and technological standards.
This marks the first time the ECB has approved a formal pilot to connect central bank money with DLT platforms. The outcomes of Pontes will help shape future integrations—potentially serving as a template for central bank digital currencies and wholesale tokenised ecosystems. The experiments under Appia could establish key precedents for global interoperability standards and regulatory coordination, reinforcing the Eurosystem’s role as a leader in secure, innovative payment infrastructures.