Beam Helping Ghana Join 'African Bitcoin Club' with Fast and Cheap 'ReBittances'

Published at: Oct. 3, 2014

Beam is a brand new bitcoin company looking to shake up the African remittance industry. They are utilizing Bitcoin’s payment system and borderless nature to give Ghanaians cheaper and quicker remittances. When bitcoins are sent to Beam, Beam will immediately turn the bitcoins into Ghana’s fiat currency, the Ghana cedi, and deliver the money to the recipient through one of Ghana’s various mobile money services.

According to their website, recipients get an extra GHS 55.55 and save £8.90 in transfer fees by using their service compared to MoneyGram or Western Union.

Beam is made up of two core members - CEO, Nikunj Handa and CTO, Falk Benke. Handa has lived in five countries, including his homeland of India. He is a fully fledged developer with degrees in finance and information systems. Benke is from Germany and is a former employee of IBM. He has a master’s with honors in IT systems engineering as well as a keen interest in machine learning algorithms.

Beam has a skillful team of advisors, including a legal and marketing advisor. Beam is part of the Meltwater Incubator in Accra, Ghana. Meltwater is a prestigious entrepreneurial school, and start up incubator in Ghana, with a long history of helping startups succeed in Africa.

Bitcoin’s Opportunity in Ghana

As Ghanaians travel abroad for better jobs, they send money back to their family in Ghana. The West African nation, located along the Gulf of Guinea and the Atlantic Ocean, is projected to comprise US$39 billion in yearly remittances by 2015, according to World Bank’s Migration and Development Brief 2013 edition. A majority of these remittances being sent to Africa are from the United Kingdom, United States or Canada.

Nikunj shared his thoughts with Cointelegraph via email about Beam’s opportunity in Africa:

“Traditional Money Transfer organizations like Western Union and MoneyGram charge an average of 12%, sometimes taking up to 2-3 days. Moreover, people have to go through the inconvenience of making payments at physical locations rather than in the comfort of their homes using their computers or phones. With Beam’s beautiful web and mobile interfaces, people will be able to conveniently send money instantly, from the comfort of their homes, for a fraction of the cost (roughly 3-4%)! ”

The team behind Beam didn’t come to Ghana with this opportunity in mind, though. Both came originally to be teacher fellows at the Meltwater Entrepreneurial School of Technology. While living in Ghana, they bought and sold over USD 35,000 worth of bitcoins for “100 unique Ghanaians in just 3 months.” This gave them the insight and belief that a service like Beam’s could work in Ghana.

Ghana is still very new to Bitcoin, but there is a growing community. Beam is going to be the first Bitcoin company to launch in Ghana, but there are other companies like, GhanaBitcoin which plan to launch later. People seem to be very open to Bitcoin in the country. “It is new, and fresh, but there is a lot of potential,” says Handa. “People want to use bitcoins to make P2P payments, merchant payments, money transfers, etc. We would never have thought we would be able to transact USD 35,000 worth of Bitcoins in Ghana with minimal marketing. The response from the community has been simply amazing.”

Beam sees an opportunity for Bitcoin remittances not only in Ghana. The company already has plans to expand into Nigeria. Nigeria has an even smaller Bitcoin adoption than Ghana, but hopefully a company like Beam can create demand and help educate people about the new technology.

Ghana Joining the African Bitcoin Club

Africa is talked about a lot by Bitcoiners as a place with a lot of potential for the virtual currency. Bitcoin could be a great alternative to the slower and expensive financial systems on the continent. Kenya, South Africa, and Botswana all have rapidly developing Bitcoin communities. Bitcoin’s robust, cheaper, and border-agnostic aspects are very attractive to the financially fragmented content. Technological barriers certainly exist, but more and more companies are popping up to solve this problem. 

Tags
Related Posts
African Gold’s Position Amid the Global COVID-19 Crisis
Western perception of precious African resources usually tends to focus on the diamond trade. However, amid an ongoing pandemic, gold usually surfaces as both one of the most in-demand and discussed assets in the world. Historically known as a risk-off asset, meaning its price is decoupled from most financial markets, gold is a safe-haven asset sought by financial institutions and retail traders alike. While the COVID-19 fallout has sparked widespread losses across global markets, with the price of gold also falling, the precious metal usually weathers financial storms better than most assets. This is in tune with the 2008 financial …
Decentralization / April 24, 2020
Blockchain for sustainable development: The case of Ghana
In modern times of rapid globalization and digitization, technological developments have now reached such proportions that the usage of cryptocurrencies is no new phenomenon. The technology behind blockchain opens the internet for financial services by replacing trust, a fundamental component of the financial system for centuries, with transparency integrated into a decentralized network. Thereby, blockchain bears the potential to help achieve the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) by empowering the unbanked, predominantly women, reducing transaction fees as well as creating an alternative source of liquidity. Only 57.7% of adults in Ghana in 2021 had a bank account. Unable to …
Adoption / June 11, 2022
Strike partners with Bitnob to facilitate cross-border payments into Africa
The Lightning Network has struck Ghana, Kenya and Nigeria. During a conference in Ghana, Strike CEO Jack Mallers announced that the Bitcoin (BTC) payments company has partnered with the mobile app Bitnob to facilitate payments into Africa. Mallers made the announcement on stage at AfroBitcoin, a Bitcoin conference in Ghana's capital city of Accra. He stood alongside Bernard Farah, the Nigerian CEO of Bitnob, following a short presentation on how it works. Money transfers into Africa take advantage of the Lightning Network, the layer-2 payments network built atop Bitcoin. The feature is called “Send Globally,” and it enables instant, low-cost …
Bitcoin / Dec. 6, 2022
Bitcoin Lightning Network growth is organic, coming from real-world adoption
Bitcoin’s Lightning Network (LN) capacity recently surpassed an all-time high of 5,000 BTC. The Lightning Network is a neutral protocol built on top of Bitcoin and currently it does not have a “native” token attached to it like many decentralized finance platforms. Although the Lightning Network’s total liquidity is less than 0.5% of the ETH in DeFi contracts, the uptrend in Bitcoin’s LN capacity versus a downtrend in the amount of ETH locked in smart contracts is encouraging for LN development. While the liquidity on the LN has been rising consistently, the number of channels on the peer-to-peer network dropped …
Adoption / Feb. 22, 2023
Emerging economies dominate Chainalysis’ 2021 Global Crypto Adoption Index
Vietnam, India and Pakistan are leading the world in terms of cryptocurrency adoption, underscoring the resilience of peer-to-peer monetary systems in emerging economies. Chainalysis’ 2021 Global Crypto Adoption Index evaluated 154 countries based on three key metrics: on-chain cryptocurrency value received, on-chain retail value transferred and peer-to-peer exchange trade volume. Each metric was weighted by the purchasing power parity. Vietnam received the highest index score for its strong performance across all three metrics. India was a distant second, but still performed exceptionally well for on-chain value received and on-chain retail value received. Pakistan came in third with a strong showing …
Adoption / Aug. 18, 2021