The decentralized finance ecosystem faces a dual inflection point on May 18, 2024. Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin unveils EIP-7706, a proposal to fundamentally restructure how gas fees work on the network, while European regulatory pressure through the MiCA framework threatens to reshape stablecoin liquidity across the continent. Together, these developments signal that DeFi’s infrastructure layer is undergoing its most significant evolution since the Merge.
TL;DR
- Vitalik Buterin introduces EIP-7706, adding a third gas type for Ethereum transactions alongside execution and blob gas
- The proposal unifies gas pricing under a multi-dimensional framework, modifying EIP-1559 in the process
- Kraken considers delisting USDT in Europe as MiCA stablecoin rules take effect in July 2024
- Tether’s CTO Paolo Ardoino criticizes MiCA’s reserve constraints, says company has no plans to seek EU approval
- Over one million new tokens created since April, with 88% launching on Base L2
EIP-7706: A Multi-Dimensional Gas Future for Ethereum
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin officially introduces EIP-7706, a proposal that adds a new category of gas for specific transaction types on the Ethereum network. The proposal creates a three-tier gas pricing system: execution gas, data call gas, and blob gas, each with its own basefee and priority fee calculations through dedicated max_basefee and priority_fee functions.
The core innovation lies in separating transaction costs by resource consumption type. Currently, EIP-1559 uses a single-dimensional gas model where all operations compete for the same block space. EIP-7706 recognizes that execution, calldata, and blob storage impose fundamentally different loads on the network and should be priced independently.
To implement this change, EIP-7706 requires modifications to EIP-1559 that unify the settlement mechanism across all three gas types. The result would be a more efficient allocation of block resources, particularly beneficial for DeFi protocols that interact with smart contracts in computationally diverse ways. Lending platforms like Aave and Compound, decentralized exchanges like Uniswap, and yield aggregators all stand to benefit from more granular gas pricing.
Buterin has previously discussed the concept of “multi-dimensional” gas pricing in his blog posts, arguing that separating transaction types allows Ethereum to optimize blockchain resource utilization. In March 2024, he called the next five years “crucial” for mass adoption of Ethereum and its integration into real-world applications — a vision that EIP-7706 directly supports by making the network more efficient for complex DeFi operations.
Kraken’s USDT Warning Shot Across European Markets
As Ethereum evolves its fee mechanism, the stablecoin backbone of DeFi faces regulatory headwinds in Europe. Kraken’s Global Head of Regulatory Strategy Marcus Hughes told Bloomberg that the exchange is planning for circumstances in which it becomes “not tenable to list specific tokens such as USDT” in the European Union.
The warning stems from the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation, which takes full effect in July 2024. MiCA requires fiat-backed stablecoin issuers like Tether to register as electronic money institutions and meet stringent reserve management, transparency, and operational requirements. Hughes indicated that the new regulations will reduce the number and varieties of stablecoins available to European users, depending on which issuers choose to comply.
Tether’s response has been defiant. CTO Paolo Ardoino publicly criticized MiCA’s “strong constraints” around reserve management and stated that the company has no plans to pursue EU regulatory approval “for the moment.” Tether told Bloomberg it expects exchanges to maintain USDT as an on-ramp and off-ramp while providing EUR liquidity for European customers — but without MiCA compliance, that expectation may prove optimistic.
A Kraken spokesperson subsequently clarified to The Block that the firm has “no current plans to delist Tether or alter USDT trading pairs,” suggesting the original comments reflected contingency planning rather than imminent action. Nevertheless, the mere acknowledgment of potential delisting sent ripples through DeFi circles, where USDT underpins billions in liquidity across lending protocols and DEX pools.
The Token Explosion on Base and Solana
The DeFi landscape continues to expand at a staggering pace. Since April 1, 2024, over 372,642 new tokens have launched on the Ethereum network — and 88% of them deploy on Base, Coinbase’s Layer 2 solution. The surge reflects Base’s low transaction costs and the ongoing meme token frenzy that has drawn speculative capital away from traditional DeFi yield farming.
The total value locked on Base has increased approximately 630% since the beginning of 2024, cementing its position as a major DeFi hub. Meanwhile, 643,227 new tokens have appeared on the Solana blockchain, with the vast majority classified as meme coins. CoinGecko tracks 614 meme tokens with a combined market capitalization of $55.4 billion — a figure that underscores how speculative capital has become a dominant force in crypto markets.
For DeFi purists, the token explosion presents a paradox: the infrastructure improvements like EIP-7706 make Ethereum more efficient, but much of the resulting activity concentrates on speculative assets rather than the complex financial primitives that originally defined the space.
Why This Matters
The simultaneous evolution of Ethereum’s gas architecture and the regulatory crackdown on stablecoins represents a pivotal moment for DeFi. EIP-7706 promises to make smart contract interactions more efficient and predictable, potentially unlocking a new wave of sophisticated on-chain financial products. But Kraken’s USDT deliberations reveal that the stablecoin rails supporting DeFi liquidity face an existential threat in Europe. If major exchanges begin delisting USDT under MiCA, the resulting liquidity fragmentation could force DeFi protocols to adapt to a multi-stablecoin world or risk losing European user bases entirely. The infrastructure is getting better — the question is whether the regulatory environment will let builders use it.
Disclaimer: This article was written for informational purposes based on historical data from May 18, 2024. Cryptocurrency markets are highly volatile, and past performance does not guarantee future results. Always conduct your own research before making investment decisions.
three tier gas pricing is long overdue. blob gas and execution gas should have never competed for the same block space.
Kraken considering a USDT delisting under MiCA while Tether openly refuses to comply is the kind of regulatory standoff I expected.
the real question is whether MiCA enforcement will actually happen or if its just more regulatory theater. eu has been all talk.
^ MiCA takes effect july 2024 for stablecoins. kraken wouldnt be preparing delistings if it was just theater
ardoino saying tether wont seek EU approval is wild. they are basically conceding the european market to circle.
88% of new tokens launching on Base is insane concentration. Vitalik redesigning gas while the L2 ecosystem just memes.