Nasdaq-listed browser company Opera has submitted a proposal to the Celo governance forum requesting 160 million CELO tokens as part of a three-year commercial framework that would replace its existing cash-based partnership and give Opera a 27% share of circulating supply.
The 160 million token request represents 27% of CELO’s current circulating supply and 16% of the total 1 billion token supply. That is not a minor allocation. It is a structural shift in who holds meaningful influence over the network.
Opera has built governance safeguards into the proposal to address that concentration risk directly. The company is proposing a voluntary cap on its own voting power at 10% of total staked CELO, with an exception carved out for emergency scenarios. That cap limits Opera’s governance influence to a level below what its token holdings would otherwise command, which is the concession designed to make the proposal acceptable to the existing Celo community.
According to Morningstar report, the allocation is pending approval through Celo’s decentralized treasury governance process. The community votes on it. Opera does not receive the tokens until that approval clears.
The commercial justification for the proposal size is MiniPay’s growth. Opera’s self-custodial stablecoin wallet launched on Celo in 2023 and has since reached 14 million account registrations across 66 countries, processing 420 million transactions. Over 50 million Opera browser users have earned rewards redeemable as USDT within the MiniPay wallet.
Those numbers make Opera one of the largest distribution channels in the Celo ecosystem by a significant margin. The existing arrangement compensates Opera in cash for that distribution work. The new proposal replaces cash compensation with token alignment, converting a vendor relationship into a stakeholder relationship. Opera’s argument is that its contribution to network growth justifies a proportional stake in network ownership.
Whether the Celo community agrees depends on how they value the distribution Opera has delivered versus what 27% of circulating supply actually costs the network in dilution terms. That trade-off is the central question the governance vote will resolve.
The proposal includes geographic expansion commitments. Opera has identified Latin America and Southeast Asia as the next growth markets for MiniPay, with specific launches in Vietnam and the Philippines scheduled for next month. Those markets represent large populations with meaningful remittance activity and limited access to traditional banking infrastructure, which is the user profile that stablecoin wallets have historically converted most effectively.
Expansion commitments attached to a token grant create a performance accountability structure. Opera is not just asking for tokens in recognition of past work. It is proposing a forward-looking commercial arrangement with defined deliverables tied to new market development.
The proposal lands as Celo is mid-transition from an independent Layer 1 blockchain to an Ethereum Layer 2 network. That architectural shift changes Celo’s positioning within the broader ecosystem and makes the network’s relationship with large distribution partners more consequential than it was when Celo operated as a standalone chain.
Opera reported $615 million in revenue over the last twelve months, a 28% year-over-year increase. A company with that financial trajectory and 50 million users connected to the Celo ecosystem is a different category of governance participant than a typical crypto-native stakeholder. The Celo community’s decision will reflect whether they view that scale as an asset worth compensating at the proposed level or a concentration risk worth limiting.
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