- Toyota Blockchain Lab and Avalanche are developing the Mobility Orchestration Network (MON) to power blockchain-based robotaxis.
- The project aims to handle vehicle financing, insurance, ride-sharing, and ownership tracking fully on-chain.
- Avalanche continues to expand in real-world asset tokenization, while pushing blockchain deeper into mobility markets.
Toyota Blockchain Lab is linking up with Avalanche in Japan to roll out an ambitious idea: robotaxis powered by blockchain. The two are building what they call the Mobility Orchestration Network (MON), a proof-of-concept using Avalanche’s multichain framework and Interchain Messaging (ICM). The goal isn’t just moving people around—it’s about rethinking the entire stack of vehicle financing, insurance, ride-sharing, and even carbon credit tracking.
Building the Mobility Orchestration Network
The MON aims to make robotaxi fleets manageable on-chain. Everything from ownership transfers to insurance contracts could be automated, standardized, and recorded directly on Avalanche. Roi Hirata, head of Japan at Ava Labs, explained that this model opens the door for new kinds of operators: “You can actually start your own robotaxi services by raising funds on-chain, with some kind of security token system.”
That means investors or small businesses could manage fleets without middlemen. Leasing, performance tracking, even payments—everything would live transparently on-chain, turning blockchain into the backbone of the robotaxi economy.
Industry Hurdles and Bigger Opportunities
Of course, the idea has its roadblocks. Hirata admitted that manufacturers remain the toughest piece to bring on board. Different countries require different official vehicle records, and syncing that with blockchain is no small task. Still, both Toyota and Avalanche see this as the necessary step to scale the concept.
Beyond robotaxis, MON showcases the possibility of tokenized mobility itself—where cars, rides, and ownership rights could all be tracked, financed, and transferred through decentralized applications. It’s a vision that extends beyond taxis into the entire transport economy.
Avalanche Expands Into Real-World Assets
Meanwhile, Avalanche is also strengthening its push into real-world asset tokenization. Grove, backed by Steakhouse Financial, is preparing to tokenize $250 million worth of assets with the help of Janus Henderson, a $373 billion asset manager. The network itself just hit another milestone too, surpassing four billion processed transactions.
The partnership with Toyota suggests Avalanche isn’t just focused on finance—it wants to build into real mobility markets. If robotaxis take off on blockchain rails, it could reshape how people think about both cars and crypto.