Hedera Council is allocating an additional $4.86 billion to the native HBAR token in a significant step to strengthen network development.
The committee that oversees the operations of the Hedera network announced the decision in a blog post on January 12, highlighting a further strengthening of Hedera’s commitment to ecosystem development.
According to the post, the lion’s share of this allocation, 4.248 billion HBAR, will be distributed to existing initiatives including the HBAR Foundation, Hashgraph Association, and DLT Science Foundation.
The funds will be disbursed to the HBAR Foundation and Hashgraph Association in the first quarter of 2024, with the DLT Science Foundation receiving grants if it meets milestones throughout the year.
Additionally, the Hedera Council plans to utilize 614.06 million HBAR for operating expenses and payments for the initial Simple Contract for Future Tokens (SAFT) purchasers.
Hedera Council Chief Financial Officer Betsabe Botaitis noted in a post that adoption of the Hedera network will accelerate in 2023, with more than 33 billion real-world transactions processed.
She attributed much of this success to the pivotal role played by Hedera ecosystem partners in bringing applications to market and onboarding new users.
With this strong foundation, Botaitis confirmed Hedera Council’s commitment to extend further support for network development and use through the new grant.
News of the funding allocation comes shortly after the HBAR Foundation, along with the Algorand Foundation, introduced the DeRec Alliance on January 11. The alliance, which aims to develop a decentralized recovery system for cryptocurrency assets, seeks to simplify the process and tie in with the existing Web2. practices.
The plan was unveiled during a panel that included Hedera co-founder Leemon Baird and Algorand (ALGO)’s John Woods.
The DeRec Alliance is calling for industry-wide collaboration to create standards and open source code for user-friendly key recovery procedures.
Baird highlights the participation of banks, credit unions, and various wallet software projects, demonstrating the scope of the plan beyond Hedera and Algorand.
The release of a distributed recovery open-source protocol that uses secret sharing between selected helpers represents an important step forward in ensuring secret recovery without information exposure.