Digital yuan advances as PBOC outlines 2026–30 plan

China to implement a national blockchain network under 2026–2030 Plan

China’s 15th Five-year plan (2026–2030) calls for implementing a national blockchain network construction project and for active participation in international governance of digital currency. The document positions these priorities within a broader effort to modernize finance and strengthen national capabilities in the digital economy.

The Plan’s language signals state-led infrastructure building, complemented by regulatory coordination for digital finance. Its implementation window begins in 2026, anchoring policymaking and industry planning to a multi-year timeline.

Why it matters: e-CNY expansion, dual centers, global governance

Officials have linked the Plan’s timeline to the next phase of the digital yuan (e-CNY). Said Lu Lei, a deputy governor, the e-CNY will adopt a “new generation” management system starting January 1, 2026, aligning operations with the Plan’s launch.

To support scale and cross-border use, authorities have outlined dual institutions: an international operations center in Shanghai and an operations and management center in Beijing. “We will further refine the management system of the digital yuan,” said Pan Gongsheng, China’s central bank governor, underscoring the mandate to mature e-CNY governance between 2026 and 2030.

The e-CNY is a central bank digital currency, distinct from cryptocurrencies. It is designed as a digital form of the renminbi, operating within regulated payment and settlement rails.

For banks, a national blockchain network implies integration work, compliance adjustments, and operational readiness for permissioned data-sharing and audit trails. Institutions should expect stricter technical and reporting standards tied to state infrastructure and e-CNY policy tests.

Fintechs may face higher bars for licensing, interoperability, and risk controls. Vendors serving payment, identity, and trade-finance workflows could need to align with standardized interfaces and custody, AML/CFT, and data-governance requirements.

Cross-border settlement pilots are likely to prioritize trade and supply-chain corridors where e-CNY can reduce frictions under regulatory guardrails. Multinational corporates could see expanded renminbi settlement options if policy coordination advances with foreign financial institutions.

Regulatory governance: stablecoins, trading controls, RMB internationalization

Stablecoin oversight and domestic virtual currency trading controls

Authorities have linked digital currency development with risk containment. according to the State Council’s English-language portal, leadership warned about risks from overseas stablecoins and proposed crackdowns on domestic virtual currency trading to safeguard financial stability.

This approach suggests tighter supervision of fiat-referenced tokens and stricter enforcement against unlicensed crypto activities. Banks and platforms should anticipate obligations around on/off-ramps, marketing controls, and wallet-level surveillance consistent with prudential oversight.

Prudential opening to expand RMB cross-border use

Policy direction points to gradually expanding global use of the renminbi under a prudential framework. As reported by Invest in China (China Daily portal), officials highlight refining settlement policies, selective capital-account facilitation, and encouraging overseas issuance of panda bonds.

These measures, coupled with e-CNY infrastructure, could support cross-border trade settlement and liquidity management. Any opening is expected to be staged, data-driven, and coordinated with macroprudential safeguards.

FAQ about China’s 15th Five-Year Plan (2026-2030)

How will the digital yuan (e-CNY) be expanded and governed between 2026 and 2030?

A new management system starts in 2026, with phased scaling, enhanced supervision, and cross-border pilots aligned to prudential and monetary policy objectives.

What are the new PBOC institutions (the Shanghai international operations center and the Beijing management center) and what will they do?

Shanghai will handle international cooperation and pilots; Beijing will oversee system development, operations, and maintenance for e-CNY governance and infrastructure.

Source: https://coincu.com/news/digital-yuan-advances-as-pboc-outlines-2026-30-plan/