Time:2024-12-19 Click:413
Ethereum validators signaling a gas limit increase hit 10%, sparking community discussions on lowering transaction fees and enhancing network scalability.
The percentage of Ethereum validators signaling support for raising the network’s gas limit has reached 10%, marking a significant increase from just over 1% before December. The push, aimed at increasing the maximum gas allowed per block, could have profound implications for transaction fees and network scalability.
On Dec. 19, Ethereum validators supporting a gas limit above 30 million rose to 10% of the network. This shift comes as community efforts intensify to raise the gas limit to 36 million, with proponents arguing that it could lower transaction fees on Ethereum layer-1 by 15% to 33%.
Core Ethereum developer Eric Connor and former MakerDAO executive Mariano Conti launched the “Pump The Gas” initiative, rallying the community to support an eventual increase to 40 million. Connor emphasized:
“Lowering transaction fees benefits the entire ecosystem by improving accessibility and enhancing the user experience.”
The potential gas limit increase has been endorsed by Ethereum researcher Justin Drake, who reconfigured his validator for a 36 million gas limit. Drake described the move as a “20% bump to safely grease the wheels” of the network. Similarly, Emmanuel Awosika, creative director at 2077 Collective, highlighted how higher gas limits could enable developers to deploy high-demand applications without facing prohibitive costs.
Awosika explained that the current limits deter ambitious projects, as gas price spikes lead to a degraded user experience:
“Raising gas limits shows that Ethereum supports ambitious devs with the tools they need to succeed.”
While the push to increase gas limits gains traction, some community members urge caution. Ethereum Foundation’s Toni Wahrstätter warned that raising gas limits too quickly could jeopardize the network’s stability and decentralization. The “Pump The Gas” initiative also acknowledges these risks, emphasizing the need for gradual increases to mitigate potential externalities like increased storage and bandwidth demands.
The initiative’s website stated:
“If the gas limit is raised too high, we risk making the chain too large for solo node operators to validate and download. Technology improvements make gradual increases sensible over time.”
As Ethereum validators continue signaling for gas limit increases, the network faces the challenge of balancing scalability with decentralization and security. With 10% of validators now on board, the community must weigh the benefits of lower transaction fees against the risks of overextending the network’s capabilities, according to Cointelegraph.
undefined