Russian companies have started utilizing Bitcoin and other digital currencies to settle cross-border trade transactions, marking a significant shift in the country’s approach to circumvent Western financial restrictions, Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov announced on Wednesday.
Siluanov told the state-owned channel Rossiya-24 that businesses are taking advantage of newly introduced legislative changes permitting the use of cryptocurrencies for international payments. According to the finance minister, Bitcoins mined within Russia can be deployed in this “experimental process,” a move he believes should be broadened and further developed in the year ahead.
Tough Sanctions
Western sanctions have significantly complicated Russia’s trade relations, especially with crucial partners such as China and Turkey. Local banks, wary of attracting unwelcome scrutiny from Western regulators, have become highly cautious about processing transactions tied to Russian entities. These restrictions have prompted Moscow to look for alternatives, and digital assets like Bitcoin appear to fit the bill.
By legalizing cryptocurrency mining and permitting foreign trade settlements in digital currencies, the Russian government aims to mitigate the impact of sanctions on its economy. Russia remains one of the leading countries in Bitcoin mining, with a well-established community of miners leveraging the country’s often-frigid climate and relatively inexpensive energy to power the mining process.
Siluanov underscored that while there are no direct limits on purchasing cryptocurrencies in Russia, digital assets remain illegal as a form of payment for domestic transactions. Instead, Russia’s current focus is on enabling cross-border payments in order to reduce the country’s dependence on the U.S. dollar and the traditional financial infrastructure anchored by SWIFT.
President Vladimir Putin has previously argued that Washington’s consistent use of the dollar for political ends effectively undermines its own currency’s reserve status. He also noted that decentralized cryptocurrencies, such as Bitcoin, operate outside any single authority’s control, meaning no government can fully ban or seize them. According to Putin, this decentralized nature makes digital currencies an attractive option for nations seeking alternative payment channels beyond traditional banking systems.
The evolution of these experimental cross-border crypto transactions arrives against the backdrop of a record year in cryptocurrency theft. According to blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis, cybercriminals stole roughly $2.2 billion worth of digital assets in 2024, with hackers linked to North Korea responsible for around $1.3 billion of that total.
Source: https://bravenewcoin.com/insights/russia-adopts-bitcoin-for-international-trade-to-circumvent-sanctions