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Ethereum has always had an old problem:
Whether transactions can be included in a block often depends on how much gas you’re willing to pay.
In normal times, the impact isn’t that obvious, but once high-frequency trading, rollup submissions, and concentrated execution by on-chain applications come into play, execution time and costs can easily become unstable.
For retail users, this may only mean that transaction fees are a bit higher;
For institutions, it directly affects settlement arrangements, budget management, and even whether the business can run smoothly.
@ETHGasOfficial and @ether_fi’s three-year, $3 billion partnership is precisely meant to solve this problem.
If you simplify this partnership a bit, it’s really about addressing three things.
First, solving the “can it be executed on time” problem.
Many on-chain demands aren’t just about sending something out; they place great importance on timing, ordering, and confirmation certainty. For rollups, traders, and solvers, they need even more certainty.
Second, solving the “can the cost be calculated in advance” problem.
If blockspace is entirely determined by real-time bidding, gas costs are very hard to stabilize. For institutions, enterprises, and applications, this directly affects budgets and settlement arrangements. What ETHGas wants to do is to give blockspace the ability to be priced in advance.
Third, solving the “who will provide stable supply” problem.
A forward market can’t be created by talk alone; behind it, there must be enough deep validators committing—otherwise execution guarantees are difficult to truly take root. In other words, for the blockspace forward market to get running, the supply side must first stand firm.
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At this point, looking at how responsibilities are divided between the two sides makes things much clearer.
ETHGas is responsible for building the infrastructure—connecting validators and buyers—so that blockspace can be sold and reserved in advance, rather than relying only on bidding on the spot.
则 is responsible for providing supply-side resources. Using about 40% of the current ETH holdings, with a scale of about $3 billion, they will invest in ETHGas’s High Performance Staking service for a period of 3 years, and during the partnership period, they will exclusively use ETHGas’s preconfirmation platform.
In simple terms, it means: first provide large-scale validator capacity; ETHGas then converts this capability into execution assurances that can be purchased in advance; finally, buyers connect and use it.
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I think the significance of this partnership can be summarized in one sentence:
The market is starting to treat the gas problem as a financial infrastructure issue.
For ETHGas, this is an important benchmark for validating its blockspace forward market narrative;
For ether. fi, it’s about expanding the boundaries of what staked ETH can be used for—so staked ETH isn’t only earning basic yield, but can also participate in higher-level market structures.
For the entire ecosystem, the signal this releases is also very clear: if Ethereum truly needs to take on larger-scale institutional settlement and asset on-chain activity in the future, relying solely on real-time gas bidding may indeed be insufficient.
Of course, whether it’s truly worth holding in high regard depends on subsequent adoption, execution performance, and whether demand can keep up. But at least logically, this isn’t an ordinary partnership—it’s a preemptive attempt around Ethereum’s market structure.
I’d also like to ask Founder @lepsoe:
After supply-side resources such as ether. fi are in place, what will be the most important milestone for ETHGas in its next phase?