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European Commission Digital

EBSI Verifiable Credentials presented at INATBA Digital Credential Workshop

On 25 October 2021, the European Commission’s European Blockchain Services Infrastructure (EBSI) team participated in the Digital Credential Workshop, organised by the INATBA-Government Advisory Body.

INATBA (the International Association for Trusted Blockchain Applications) offers public and private developers and users of DLT a forum to interact with regulators and policy makers.

This workshop explored the technical requirements for enabling interoperable exchange of digital credentials across jurisdictions, notably international jurisdictions.

The European Blockchain Services Infrastructure (EBSI) team presented its profile of Verifiable Credentials fully based on World Wide Web Consortium’s (W3C) Verifiable Credentials and DID standards.

Decentralised identifiers (DIDs) are a new type of identifier that enables verifiable, decentralised digital identity. A DID refers to any subject (e.g., a person, organisation, thing, data model, abstract entity, etc.) as determined by the controller of the DID. The design enables the controller of a DID to prove control over it without requiring permission from any other party. DIDs are Uniform Resource Identifiers (URIs) that associate a DID subject with a DID document allowing trustable interactions associated with that subject. They are based on the Self-sovereign identity paradigm.

DID standards are becoming the basis for most Verifiable Credentials projects using different profiling.

Download the EBSI presentation of 25 October 2021


Join the Early Adopters Programme - Imagining what EBSI can do for European citizens

The European Blockchain Services Infrastructure (EBSI implements blockchain technology that provides European citizens with services based on European values, such as interoperability, security and trust. Right now, the EBSI Early Adopters programme is showing us how Europe's emerging blockchain infrastructure will look in practice.

Take a moment to look at this incubator helping Early Adopters and their partners imagine, build and launch their EBSI pilot project(s) in production to get involved and if you're building a blockchain wallet, find out how to make it EBSI-compatible!




University pilot proves value of a European Blockchain

Blockchain is the future.

This technology is transforming our society. This is why the European Commission and the European Blockchain Partnership are building the European Blockchain Services Infrastructure (EBSI). EBSI implements blockchain technology that provides European citizens with services based on European values, such as interoperability, security and trust. Right now, the EBSI Early Adopters programme and multi-university pilot are showing us how Europe's emerging blockchain infrastructure will look in practice. And if you're building a blockchain wallet, get in touch to find out how to make it EBSI-compatible!

Since 2018, 29 countries (all EU Member States, Norway and Lichtenstein) and the European Commission have joined forces to form the European Blockchain Partnership (EBP). They have committed to working together towards realising the potential of blockchain-based services for the benefit of citizens, society and the economy.

Using blockchain, citizens can set-up digital wallets and manage their identity - and other - credentials across borders. Citizens can also gain digital control of their educational credentials, significantly reducing verification costs and improving trust in documents’ authenticity.

The Commission is working with EU Member States (and beyond) to build the European Blockchain Services Infrastructure – EBSI. Through this infrastructure, blockchain technology will entirely transform the identification of verifiable credentials in Europe, especially across borders based on principle of 'Self-Sovereign Identity'. A multi-university pilot is now showing us how it will look in practice.

As of 2020, EBSI is deploying a network of distributed blockchain nodes across Europe, supporting applications focused on selected use-cases. EBSI is the first EU-wide blockchain infrastructure, driven by the public sector, in full respect of European values and legislation.

The Early Adopters programme

The first production-ready version of EBSI will be released towards the end of 2021. This release will be the result of large-scale, pan-European collaboration between Member State’s representatives and Commission services and agencies including DGs CNECT, DIGIT, EMPL, EAC, TAXUD, HADEA and the ECA (European Court of Auditors). 

In 2021, 22 projects were selected to become part of an incubator programme, known as the EBSI Early Adopters, helping the first EBSI users and their partners imagine, build and launch their pilot project(s).  The EBSI team gave each project's private and public sector partners early access to the EBSI pre-production environment and invited them to develop their own pilot project(s) addressing a specific business or government use case involving the exchange of verifiable credentials.

In early 2021, the Early Adopters programme started working directly with Member States to implement EBSI use cases (Self-Sovereign Identity (SSI), Diplomas, Traceability and Trusted data sharing) and build an ecosystem with some really outstanding real-life examples that will lead to the full rollout of EBSI.

Piloting EBSI in the education sector: the multi-university pilot

The EBSI Early Adopters have been challenged to test their different pilots in a real-life setting by taking part in the multi-university pilot. This allows them to test the interoperability of their solutions with other key actors in the ecosystem to allow for the exchange of verifiable credentials by students and universities: trusted accreditation organisations; trust issuers; holders of credentials; wallet providers and other partners.

The pilot’s scenario will demonstrate that the EBSI can implement cross-border verification of educational credential based on Self-Sovereign Identity (SSI) principles. This means that a verifiable attestation (such as a diploma) issued by one Member State will be verified by a university or third party, an employer for example, from another Member State. Over a period of four months, ending in early November, the Member States and their partners will work to deliver all the required functionalities to make this scenario a reality.


Visit the Early Adopters Programme page to learn more and get involved.

If you are a wallet provider and want to build a EBSI-compliant blockchain wallet, click here


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