Circle plans to launch its CCTP system on the Solana mainnet next week, allowing users to seamlessly move Solana-based USDC to other blockchain networks.
Circle first launched the Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol last year, but limited the protocol to certain blockchains. The latest development would see it deployed on the Solana mainnet, with an estimated arrival scheduled for March 26.
The Circle developer community’s X account announced the upcoming move in a recent post, revealing that the protocol is already live on the Solana developer net ahead of the upcoming mainnet launch. This would allow developers on Solana to test the system before launching it on the mainnet.
Attention builders!
Ahead of the launch of #CCTP next week on @solana mainnet, we’ve updated our documentation to allow developers to build out integrations on Solana devnet.
Stay tuned for mainnet availability on March 26!
🎯https://t.co/SCIz9NWfZJ pic.twitter.com/OQMSWCAAo3
— Circle Developers (@BuildOnCircle) March 20, 2024
Why is CCTP important?
Notably, CCTP is a permissionless protocol built by Circle that allows network participants to seamlessly transfer USDC tokens from one blockchain to another. The company developed the system to address the prevailing interoperability problem in the chain.
Significantly, blockchain interoperability remains one of the biggest challenges facing the industry as network participants in one chain struggle to move assets or value to another chain without difficulty.
Developers have built bridges to solve this problem, but they also come with inherent risks. In addition to the stress of using them, several bridges have fallen victim to hacks over the years. These include the Operate Heco bridge from last November and June 2022 Horizon Bridge Hack.
Circle’s CCTP allows network participants to move USDC across networks without the risk or inconvenience associated with these bridges. Instead of locking USDC into smart contracts like bridges do, the protocol destroys the USDC on the source network and its equivalent on the receiving network.
Doing this eliminates the use of packaged or unofficial versions of USDC that come from the lock-mint mechanism used by cross-chain bridges. The protocol first launched on Ethereum and Avalanche last April, with Circle confirming plans to expand to other networks.
Circle continues to provide support
Currently, Circle has expanded support to the mainnet of seven blockchain networks, including Arbitrum, Polygon PoS, Base, Noble, and Optimism. The planned support for Solana, which will bring the number of mainnets to eight, has caused excitement among Solana proponents.
Jeremy Allaire, co-founder and CEO of Circle, touted the impending development as an upcoming ‘major launch’. Recall that Circle introduced USDC support on Solana in October 2020. Meanwhile, the XRPL community has done the same continued to anticipate a similar development on the XRP Ledger.