A new Ethereum funding proposal would allow validators to redirect up to 10% of staking rewards toward ecosystem development if a majority of validators agree to the change.
The idea has reopened debate over how Ethereum should pay for public goods as concerns grow around shrinking funding sources for core development.
Proposal Looking to Solve Ethereum’s Funding Problem
The proposition, published by Ethereum contributor Clément Lesaege in a personal capacity, introduced what he called “Validator Redirected Revenue.” The framework would let validators signal both how much of their staking rewards should be diverted and which recipients should receive those funds.
According to him, Ethereum is facing a coordination problem, with infrastructure projects often benefiting the whole network but many people showing little incentive to help pay for them.
Per the motion, if more than 51% of validators support a redirect rate above zero, the selected contribution level would apply to all validators, with Lesaege’s plan capping the amount at 10% of staking rewards while keeping the option to pull the rate back to zero.
It also allows validators to select those they prefer to receive the funding, with execution clients then aggregating those preferences and determining a distribution contract through a voting mechanism. At current levels, we have about 39.8 million ETH staked, and using the proposal’s estimated 1.91% annual staking reward rate, it means that even a 5% redirect would channel approximately 38,000 ETH per year into ecosystem development, while 10% would take that figure to 76,000 ETH.
The proposal did identify cartel formation as its most serious risk, as according to Lesaege, a 51% majority of validators could theoretically vote to redirect the maximum 10% back to themselves. However, he argued that the chances of that actually happening were low because the gains made from such an attack would not be worth the reputational and price consequences that come with it.
Critics Question Governance and Incentives
Fellow developer Micah Zoltu also claimed that unlike existing attack vectors, Lesaege’s idea can create a specific pile of money up for grabs, which is a materially different incentive to attack.
“I’m not aware of any solution to this,” he wrote, calling it the reason other blockchains have not tried this kind of mechanism. But Lesaege responded, pointing out that both Bitcoin and Ethereum already carry theoretical cartel risks that have never materialized and that the social layer, including the ability to fork, was still a meaningful deterrent.
There were also others who questioned whether protocol-level funding was really necessary, with pseudonymous developer señor doggo saying that Ethereum already supports smart contract-based revenue sharing. They argued that any funding mechanism should compete voluntarily instead of becoming part of the protocol.
But some community members supported voluntary contributions, one of them being DeFi builder S. More, who said they would donate part of their staking yield to development groups they support, although they suggested that such donations should remain optional.
The proposal has come at an interesting time, considering comments made recently by former Ethereum Foundation insider Trent Van Epps, warning that the network could face funding pressure within the next few months as existing support programs expire and the Foundation reduces spending.
The post New Proposal Redirects 10% of Staking Rewards to Fund Ethereum Ecosystem appeared first on CryptoPotato.