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More Ethereum Has Been Burned Than Minted in the Past 24 Hours

Posted by Andries Van Tonder on September 04, 2021 - 7:44am

Burned Than Minted in the Past 24 Hours

EIP-1559 was supposed to bring deflationary pressure to the network. It's working.

By Jeff Benson

In brief

  • EIP-1559 was a code change that allowed transaction fees to be burned.
  • That's placed deflationary pressure on Ethereum.
  • The pressure has helped raise the price of ETH.

When EIP-1559 was introduced to Ethereum last month, it was supposed to slow down the rate at which the supply of ETH grows. But over the last 24 hours, the supply of ETH isn't growing at all. It's shrinking.

More Ethereum has been burned on the network than minted over the last 24 hours, meaning there's less ETH available today than there was yesterday. Ethereum experts believe this is a first for the network. 

EIP-1559 was a proposed coding change to the Ethereum blockchain that allowed block sizes to expand so that more transactions could be sent through on the network. The Ethereum network has struggled with congestion thanks to the popularity of NFTs and decentralized finance apps such as lending protocol Aave and exchange Uniswap, as such tools use up the network's finite resources.

Part of the proposal was to mandate a base fee for each transaction. Instead of fees continuing to go to the miners who validate network transactions, the base fee would get burned (i.e., taken out of circulation by being sent to a wallet that can't be accessed). The idea was to reduce the total supply of ETH, which, unlike Bitcoin, has no eventual cap. As a result, the price of Ethereum would theoretically rise to meet demand.

While EIP-1559 reduces the rate at which ETH supply grows, it does not necessarily lower the supply of ETH. That's because, with each block produced, miners still get to keep the newly mined ETH. As long as the amount of newly mined ETH is higher than the base fees burned, the overall supply of ETH increases.

That's no longer the case, at least today. 

In a 24-hour period spanning Thursday and Friday, the supply growth turned negative. More ETH was burned than the 12,500 to 13,000 ETH being issued to miners. This can happen as the base fee adjusts upward during periods of higher demand for Ethereum transactions. (Was it DeFi investing? NFT purchasingGaming?)

DeFi Pulse co-founder Scott Lewis and Week in Ethereum News founder Evan Van Ness believe this is the first such instance of Ethereum turning deflationary.

 

Since the code change went into effect on August 5, over 188,000 ETH has been burned, according to EIP-1559 tracking website Ultrasound Money. Per pricing from Nomics, that's the equivalent of $736 million.

The change has directly fueled a price rise for the currency. Ethereum has climbed from $2,516 on August 4 to $3,926 today—a 56% increase in one month.

Andries Van Tonder it is absurd Neal!
September 5, 2021 at 6:33am
The Neal and Janet Brown Family Trust The friggin' ETH miner's fees are OUTRAGEOUS! I am trying to exchange GELDC into ETH, and they want well OVER $100 as the miner's fee for a $40 value transaction!!! Yes you read that right, they are charging more than 2.5 times the value of the transaction for the miner's fees. These exorbitant, no USURIOUS fees are going to guarantee a continued exodus from the ETH blockchain!!!
September 5, 2021 at 2:37am
Andries Van Tonder thank you Mihai
September 4, 2021 at 4:37pm
Mihai Cristian Thanks for sharing
September 4, 2021 at 3:35pm
Andries Van Tonder Thank you Bill
September 4, 2021 at 1:32pm
Andries Van Tonder thank you Adonel
September 4, 2021 at 1:32pm
Bill Rippel A very interesting article on how burning Ethereum can directly fuel the price to new highs. Thanks for sharing, Andries.
September 4, 2021 at 12:39pm
Adonel Lowings Thank you for sharing this blog
September 4, 2021 at 7:58am