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Cryptocurrency News Articles
Ethereum Validators Raise Gas Limit for the First Time in the Merge Era
Feb 04, 2025 at 05:22 pm
The Ethereum network’s capacity to handle more transactions increased further late Monday as validators agreed on a gas limit increase for the first time since late 2021
The Ethereum network's capacity to handle more transactions increased further on Monday, with validators agreeing on a gas limit increase for the first time since late 2021, also marking the first time in the network's Merge era.
The gas limit on Ethereum reached nearly 32 million gas units as of Tuesday morning with a maximum expected capacity of 36 million units. The last significant increase was in 2021, when the limit jumped from 15 million to 30 million gas units.
This change was implemented after more than half of the validators supported the adjustment, which was enacted automatically without the need for a hard fork (or a split in the network).
On Ethereum, gas is a unit that measures the computational work required to execute operations like transactions or smart contract functions. Each operation has a gas cost associated with it, ensuring that users pay for the exact amount of computational effort their actions require.
The gas limit is the total amount of gas that can be used in a block. If transactions in a block exceed this limit, they are either delayed to the next block or must compete for inclusion based on the gas price offered.
Raising the gas limit allows Ethereum to process more transactions or more complex operations within each block, thus improving network throughput and allowing the creation of sophisticated decentralized financial (DeFi) applications with minimal downtime.
Higher gas limits also mean less congestion during peak times, which can make the network costly to use and turn users away to cheaper networks such as Solana.
More network utility can add to investor demand for ETH, helping buoy the world's second-largest token that has fallen out of investor favor in the past year.
Ether (ETH) slumped Sunday to its lowest level against bitcoin (BTC) since March 2021 as the world's second-largest token extended losses against its larger rival.
One ether dropped to 0.03 BTC in January, as CoinDesk reported, almost 50% lower than a year ago, as bitcoin soared in the run-up to U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration.
The exchange rate for the two tokens, conventionally called the ETH/BTC ratio, peaked above 0.08 in 2022 and ETH's value proposition has been on the decline ever since.
https://x.com/VitalikButerin/status/1886580315965009964
In addition, the upcoming Pectra upgrade is set to double the capacity of layer-2 networks — or blockchains that operate atop Ethereum — by increasing the blob target from 3 to 6. "Blobs" are large data packets used by layer-2 networks to store data for a certain time period, with 3 blobs being included in each Ethereum block as of Tuesday.
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