Key Points Ethereum core development faces a $30 million annual funding gap after program expirations. Foundation’s reduced role tests decentralized governance and long-term developer sustain
Key Points
- Ethereum core development faces a $30 million annual funding gap after program expirations.
- Foundation’s reduced role tests decentralized governance and long-term developer sustainability.
Former Ethereum Foundation ecosystem development lead Trent Van Epps said in a June 26 interview that Ethereum requires about $30 million annually to sustain core protocol development, a level current mechanisms do not meet.
He described the situation as a structural funding challenge tied to the network’s evolving governance model rather than a temporary budget issue.
Ethereum Foundation’s Subtraction Strategy
Van Epps departed after the Ethereum Foundation accelerated its “subtraction strategy,” aimed at reducing its central influence and distributing responsibility across the broader ecosystem.
This approach includes plans to lower annual treasury spending from roughly 15% of holdings toward 5% by 2030, alongside workforce reductions and leadership changes.
A key pressure point is the April 2026 expiration of the Client Incentive Program, which provided vesting-based ETH rewards to execution and consensus client teams such as Geth, Erigon, and Lighthouse.
The program was introduced as temporary support while alternative funding systems developed, but replacements have not reached sufficient scale.
Protocol Guild and the Funding Gap
Van Epps co-founded Protocol Guild to distribute donated tokens to active Layer 1 contributors through long-term vesting without granting donors governance control.
Backed by ecosystem contributors including Lido, Uniswap, and ENS, the initiative has distributed nearly $40 million over four years, averaging about $10 million annually.
Compared to the estimated $30 million yearly requirement, this leaves a shortfall of roughly $20 million per year.
Van Epps attributed the imbalance in part to a free rider dynamic, where DeFi protocols, stablecoin issuers, and Layer 2 networks benefit from Ethereum’s infrastructure without formal obligations to fund its maintenance.
He outlined potential risks if funding remains unresolved, including developer attrition, reduced client diversity, slower vulnerability response, and delays in roadmap initiatives such as quantum-resistance upgrades.
Despite these concerns, he stated that Ethereum’s position in decentralized finance, stablecoin settlement, and EVM adoption provides durable network effects.
He projected a future in which the Ethereum Foundation assumes a narrower research and coordination role while independent institutions oversee commercialization, infrastructure support, and ecosystem expansion.
Van Epps also emphasized the need for clearer messaging around ETH’s connection to on-chain economic activity to attract broader institutional funding support.