Ripple is unleashing the XRP Ledger to revolutionize Colombia’s farming economy, powering traceability, sustainability premiums, and microfinance access for smallholder farmers.

Ripple Leverages XRP Ledger to Support Colombian Farmers With Blockchain and Microfinance
Ripple announced on May 15 the launch of its second pilot this year with Mercy Corps Ventures, working in partnership with traceability technology provider WËIA, to advance agricultural finance in Colombia. The initiative is part of Ripple Impact’s broader “Unlocking Opportunity” program and focuses on using blockchain technology to improve the livelihoods of smallholder farmers. Ripple emphasized the project’s goals:
In collaboration with WËIA, this pilot is designed to increase financial inclusion and income for smallholder farmers in Colombia through blockchain-powered traceability on the XRP Ledger (XRPL).
The pilot deploys WËIA’s traceability platform, built on the XRP Ledger, to track the production of agricultural goods—specifically panela, a traditional unrefined cane sugar—from planting through harvest. The system assigns each product a QR code that offers verifiable sustainability information, addressing the growing demand for transparency in global food supply chains. The XRPL’s speed, cost-efficiency, and carbon-neutral architecture provide the technical foundation for reliable, immutable recordkeeping. Additionally, the pilot introduces a “Farm Now, Pay Later” (FNPL) financing option, allowing farmers to procure inputs up front and defer repayment until after harvest. This mechanism aims to ease liquidity constraints that have historically limited farmers’ productivity.
About 300 smallholder farmers will participate, processing a total of 240 tonnes of panela per month. The program also highlights gender inclusion, with 46% of participants being women—well above the national average of 26%. The pilot sets out to test three core outcomes: whether verified sustainability data leads to higher product pricing, if transparency increases satisfaction among retailers, and whether blockchain-enabled traceability encourages more formal agreements between farmers and buyers.
Ripple described the broader significance of the project:
This pilot offers a unique opportunity to demonstrate real-world applications of blockchain to improve traceability in agriculture, creating pathways for smallholder farmers to access financial services, improve livelihoods and ensure compliance with global sustainability regulations.