Pick n Pay Plans to Accept Bitcoin at Its Till Points

Pick n Pay has announced that it will soon allow its consumers to pay for groceries with crypto at 39 stores, and at all stores nationwide within months. Pick n Pay, which has been experimenting with cryptocurrency payments for several years, is expanding its crypto offering, allowing consumers to pay for groceries with crypto at 39 stores nationwide.

It plans to roll out the crypto service to all of its stores in the “coming months”, it said in a statement on Tuesday.

Pick n Pay

This ground-breaking development in the world of crypto follows the conclusion of a first phase of a new pilot by the retailer that allows customers to pay using cryptocurrency on their smartphones using a “trusted app”.

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The transaction is as easy and secure as swiping a debit or credit card. Customers scan a QR code…

“While for many years crypto was something for specialists on their computers, or used by early adopters trying it out, things are changing. The Financial Sector Conduct Authority’s recent announcement paves the way for cryptocurrency as a mainstream method of payment,” the retailer said in the statement.

“Increasingly cryptocurrency is being used by those underserved by traditional banking systems, or by those wanting to pay and exchange money in a cheaper and convenient way. Many companies are responding to this by accepting bitcoin,” it added.

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In its latest pilot, Pick n Pay said it tested a payment service technology that allows customers to buy groceries with cryptocurrency at till points with any bitcoin lightning-enabled app, including BlueWallet and Muun. The lightning protocol speeds up transactions on the bitcoin network.

 “The transaction is as easy and secure as swiping a debit or credit card. Customers scan a QR code from the app and accept the rand conversion rate on their smartphone at the time of the transaction. The service fee for each transaction is minimal, costing the customer on average 70c, and takes less than 30 seconds.”

The retailer said it ran the pilot in 10 Western Cape stores over the past five months with pre-selected testers. This included Bitcoin Ekasi in Mossel Bay, which pays non-profit organisation The Surfer Kids coaches in bitcoin while simultaneously onboarding township vendors to accept bitcoin as payment. “As the local Pick n Pay store now accepts bitcoin, the coaches and children can spend their earnings more widely and conveniently than before.”

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Pick n Pay has now extended the pilot to a further 29 stores for testing with customers, with the intention to roll it out to all stores in the coming months, it said.

The participating stores are:

Langeberg Mall, Mosselbay

Sedgefield

Stellenbosch Central and Stellenbosch Square

Paarl Mall

Willowbridge

Local Big Bay

Table Bay Mall

Cavendish

Kenilworth

Kenilworth Campus

Kenilworth Pam Golding

Seapoint

Waterfront

Mall of Africa

Mall of the North

Mall of the South

Menlyn Mall

Nelspruit

PnP on Nicol

Liberty Midlands Mall

The Pavilion

Tshwane Mall

Beacon Bay

Uitenhage

Bedfordview

Centurion

Fourways Mall

PnP Qualisave Carlton Centre

PnP Qualisave Diepsloot

PnP Qualisave Midrand

PnP Qualisave Rustenburg

PnP Qualisave Commercial Road

PnP Qualisave North Beach

PnP Qualisave The Workshop

PnP Qualisave Goodwood

Hyper Bloemfontein

Hyper Durban North

Hyper Northgate

Hyper Ottery

The retailer first started experimenting with bitcoin five years ago, when it ran a pilot in the staff canteen store at its head office in Cape Town. “It proved the concept, but the available technology at the time was too expensive for shoppers and it took too long to finalise the transaction to make it sustainable,” it said.

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“This new technology means we can provide an affordable service for high volume, low-value transactions that will promote financial inclusion in South Africa,” said Pick n Pay group executive for IT, Chris Shortt.

Pick n Pay partnered with Electrum and CryptoConvert for the latest pilot. Electrum’s payment platform connects Cryptoconvert and Pick n Pay, letting customers pay with the bitcoin lightning technology at the till point.

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry