The Ethereum blockchain has successfully activated its much-anticipated “Dencun” upgrade, marking a significant milestone in its quest to reduce data fees and scale the network.
The upgrade, which took place on March 13, 2024, at 13:55 UTC, is considered the biggest upgrade since the Merge and is expected to have a profound impact on the Ethereum ecosystem.
TLDR
- Ethereum activates “Dencun” upgrade to reduce data fees and spur growth on layer-2 networks
- Proto-danksharding enables a new place for storing data on Ethereum at a lower cost
- Dencun is a crucial step towards tackling Ethereum’s high transaction fees and scaling the blockchain
- The upgrade is expected to benefit layer-2 networks and could lead to a fee war among them
- Ethereum’s price dipped slightly after the Dencun upgrade but quickly recovered
At the heart of the Dencun upgrade is the implementation of “proto-danksharding,” a new transaction category that introduces data blobs – a dedicated space for storing data on Ethereum at a lower cost.
This feature is designed to benefit layer-2 networks like Arbitrum, Optimism, and Polygon, which help scale Ethereum by bundling transactions and settling them on the main blockchain in large batches.
The blobs have arrived on Ethereum! ????
The Dencun upgrade has successfully launched on Ethereum mainnet making it one of the biggest upgrades to support Layer 2’s in scaling Ethereum.
Now with the Ethereum mainnet upgrade complete, we expect the ArbOS Atlas upgrade to be…
— Arbitrum (????,????) (@arbitrum) March 13, 2024
By enabling layer-2 networks to post data directly to Ethereum through the new data blobs, rather than using the current inefficient transactional data fields, the Dencun upgrade aims to make the process of settling data for rollups more efficient and cost-effective. This, in turn, is expected to reduce fees for end-users on these layer-2 networks.
The Dencun upgrade is a crucial step towards Ethereum’s ultimate goal of implementing sharding, a technological feature that will break up the blockchain into mini-shards to process more transactions at a lower cost.
While the full implementation of sharding is still years away, proto-danksharding serves as an interim solution to address Ethereum’s notoriously high gas fees.
In addition to proto-danksharding, the Dencun upgrade package includes eight other Ethereum Improvement Proposals (EIPs) that primarily affect developers. These proposals aim to reduce fees for storing data on-chain, improve designs for bridges and staking pools, and enhance the overall user experience.
As the Dencun upgrade goes live, there is speculation that it could trigger a fee war among Ethereum’s layer-2 networks, as they compete for users by offering cheaper transaction fees.
However, the full impact of proto-danksharding on transaction fees will only be measurable once the upgrade is fully implemented and adopted by the ecosystem.
Following the activation of the Dencun upgrade, Ethereum’s native cryptocurrency, ether (ETH), experienced a slight dip in price but quickly recovered.
This temporary price fluctuation is not uncommon after significant upgrades, as the market adjusts to the changes and assesses their long-term implications.