Data chart review: What happened to Ethereum after the Cancun upgrade?

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In March 2024, L2 paid more than 10,000 ETH in fees on Ethereum, but in July, they paid less than 400 ETH in fees.

Written by: ParaFi Capital

Compiled by: 1912212.eth, Foresight News

We are deeply studying the development of Ethereum after EIP-4844, focusing on the following three important directions:

  1. What is the latest progress of ETH destruction?
  2. What is the appeal of L2 networks?
  3. What is the economic connection between L2 and Ethereum?

After EIP-1559 and the merge upgrade, people were excited about the economics of ETH as a cash flow-generating asset. After the first two upgrades, the supply of ETH did drop, dropping by about 0.38% from September 2022 to April 2024. Since then, however, the ETH supply has been climbing as the burn rate has slowed.

ETH staking rewards rates have been trending downward over the past 12 months as the number of Ethereum validators has grown 79% over the past year while L1 transaction fees have fallen.

Although the destruction rate has slowed down, applications or protocols such as Uniswap, Tether, 1inch and MetaMask continue to drive most of the Gas consumption on Ethereum. In 2023, Arbitrum and ZKsync were the main Gas consumers, but their data has dropped significantly this year because the EIP-4844 proposal allows L2 to publish data more efficiently, reducing its data storage requirements.

Over the past two and a half years, the number of Ethereum transactions has remained relatively stagnant, while the total number of L2 transactions exceeded L1 by 10 times in August 2024.

The growth in L2 activity can be attributed to the launch of new L2s and the explosive development of some existing L2s. Since March, Base and Arbitrum have both seen more daily transactions than Ethereum. While this chart aggregates transactions from multiple L2s, each L2 is providing alternative block space to Ethereum, highlighting the general trend of L1 to L2 migration.

The growing popularity of Ethereum L2 is also reflected in the fact that they have attracted a large amount of DEX market share from Ethereum. After the EIP-4844 upgrade, L2 has reduced the DEX market share on the Ethereum mainnet to below 60%.

However, this also highlights the problem of liquidity fragmentation caused by the continuous development of the Rollup network. Despite the great success of these L2s, they cost relatively little to publish data on Ethereum due to the EIP-4844 upgrade. EIP-4844 was implemented in March 2024 and introduced a new data storage mechanism called "blobs" to Ethereum, which is a cheaper alternative to the previous Calldata structure.

In March 2024, L2 paid more than 10,000 ETH in fees on Ethereum, but in July, they paid less than 400 ETH, a drop of about 96%. With the reduction in costs, L2 now contributes less to the destruction of ETH and also reduces the gas fee on the mainnet.

Since L2s need to publish large amounts of transaction summary data on-chain, they have rapidly adopted blobs. Since the beginning of June, at least 16,000 blobs have been published per day on Ethereum. This has led to a decline in the proportion of total fees paid by major L2s, from 12% to 1% in 2024.

Since the implementation of EIP-4844, L2 operating margins have increased significantly. While total sorter revenue for scaling solutions (i.e. the sum of fees paid on L2 networks) has fallen by an average of about 48% year to date, operating costs have fallen by about 87%, meaning that Rollups now retain the majority of revenue. Mainstream L2s now have operating margins of over 90%, even after passing on the bulk of the cost savings to users. Users benefit, with fees falling by about 90% over the past year on networks using blobs, with the median transaction cost typically below $0.01.

EIP-4844 has a significant impact on Ethereum L1.

Despite the surge in L2 usage, the direct benefit to ETH as an asset is unclear. Over the past few months, while L2 profits have risen sharply, the ETH burn rate has declined, resulting in less value flowing into ETH.

This leaves the Ethereum ecosystem with a lot of questions to think about:

  • As L2 usage continues to grow, what role will L2 tokens play? How much value will L2 tokens capture compared to ETH?
  • Are Rollups offering too much benefit relative to Ethereum? Or is this structure ideal to attract more users and developers to the broader Ethereum ecosystem?
  • As more L2s are launched, how will users and liquidity interoperate between these different networks?
  • With fees on the Ethereum mainnet now at historic levels, will we see developers reconsider deploying directly on L1, or will L2 remain more attractive?

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Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
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