It's quite exciting. The Kingdom of Bhutan is collaborating with Sei to deploy and operate a Sei mainnet validator within the country, led directly by the Bhutanese Sovereign Wealth Fund DHI, with an expected launch in Q1.
This is not about investment or buying tokens, but a national-level involvement in the operation of blockchain infrastructure.
Many people may not have much impression of Bhutan, but it is actually a country deeply involved in the crypto space:
Since 2019, Bhutan has been mining BTC using hydropower, with government-controlled mining farms. The country’s BTC reserves are among the top globally, and it has partnerships with US-listed mining companies like Bitdeer.
Now, moving from Bitcoin mining to Layer1 validators, essentially expanding its blockchain capabilities.
For Sei, this is not just adding a node. It’s a sovereign-level trust endorsement and a signal that public chains are moving from “financial tools” to “national infrastructure.”
National-level collaborations often do not chase hot trends but focus on stability, long-term usability, and large-scale application potential.
When a country known for its “Gross National Happiness” begins to seriously consider long-term systems like tokenization, payments, and IDs, the choice of blockchain itself speaks volumes.
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It's quite exciting. The Kingdom of Bhutan is collaborating with Sei to deploy and operate a Sei mainnet validator within the country, led directly by the Bhutanese Sovereign Wealth Fund DHI, with an expected launch in Q1.
This is not about investment or buying tokens, but a national-level involvement in the operation of blockchain infrastructure.
Many people may not have much impression of Bhutan, but it is actually a country deeply involved in the crypto space:
Since 2019, Bhutan has been mining BTC using hydropower, with government-controlled mining farms. The country’s BTC reserves are among the top globally, and it has partnerships with US-listed mining companies like Bitdeer.
Now, moving from Bitcoin mining to Layer1 validators, essentially expanding its blockchain capabilities.
For Sei, this is not just adding a node.
It’s a sovereign-level trust endorsement and a signal that public chains are moving from “financial tools” to “national infrastructure.”
National-level collaborations often do not chase hot trends but focus on stability, long-term usability, and large-scale application potential.
When a country known for its “Gross National Happiness” begins to seriously consider long-term systems like tokenization, payments, and IDs, the choice of blockchain itself speaks volumes.