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Cryptocurrency News Articles

Over 50% of Ethereum Validators Signal Support for Raising the Network's Gas Limit

Feb 04, 2025 at 01:37 pm

As of Feb. 4, Gaslimit.pics, which actively tracks the progress of validators' support for a higher gas limit, shows 52% of validators are in favor.

Over 50% of Ethereum Validators Signal Support for Raising the Network's Gas Limit

A majority of Ethereum (ETH) validators have signaled their support for increasing the network’s gas limit, paving the way for scaling the layer 1 (L1) network without a hard fork.

As of Feb. 4, Gaslimit.pics, which actively tracks the progress of validators’ support for a higher gas limit, shows 52% of validators are in favor. This surpasses the threshold, which requires at least half of the validators to agree to scale the network.

Validators can adjust their node configurations to signal support for increasing the gas limit, which enables the network to scale without a hard fork.

The average Ethereum gas limit has been around 30 million since August 2021, after it was increased from 15 million, according to Ycharts.

As of Feb. 4, 52% of validators are in favor of increasing the gas limit for transactions on the Ethereum blockchain. Source: Gaslimit.pics

Data on Blockscout, a multichain block explorer, shows the gas limit is already rising, with a transaction at around 3 AM UTC showing a gas limit of over 33 million.

Crypto commentator Evan Van Ness, the former director of operations for blockchain technology firm Consensys, said in a Feb. 4 post on X that this would be the first increase under proof-of-stake after the Merge upgrade in September 2022.

“Because PoS is so much more decentralized than antiquated tech like PoW, it took longer to coordinate,” he stated.

After the successful vote, Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin is calling for the Pectra fork, which is expected in March and will increase the blob target from three to six. Pectra will also be staker-voted, using the “same mechanism as the gas limit,” Buterin said.

This will ensure the limit “can increase in response to technology improvements without waiting for hard forks,” according to Buterin.

Prior to the successful vote, there was fierce debate in the Ethereum community. Some advocates for the gas limit increase argued that raising it to 36 million would enhance the L1 network’s capacity and reinvigorate innovation.

Ethereum researcher Justin Drake said last year in a Dec. 9 post on X that he would be configuring his validator for a 36 million gas limit to help “safely grease the wheels.”

In March, core Ethereum developer Eric Connor and former head of smart contracts at MakerDAO Mariano Conti launched a website called Pump The Gas that advocates for the gas limit to be raised to 40 million, which they said would reduce transaction fees.

Related: Vitalik outlines strategy for scaling Ethereum and strengthening ETH

However, others were concerned a raise too significant might pose risks to stability and security on the blockchain.

In a Dec. 9 post to the Ethereum Research page, the Ethereum Foundation’s Toni Wahrstätter said an increase to 60 million gas per block could result in propagation failures, missed validator slots and network destabilization.

The Pump The Gas site also acknowledged the risks, saying if raised too high, it could create a situation where the chain becomes too large for solo node operators to validate and download — but that it makes “sense to slowly increase it as time goes on.”

Magazine: Pectra hard fork explained — Will it get Ethereum back on track?

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