Ethereum Could Face a Funding Crisis Within Months
A Warning From Inside the Ecosystem Trent Van Epps, a former Ethereum Foundation contributor who spent nearly five years overseeing core development funding, has warned that $ETH's developer
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AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 19, 2026
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A Warning From Inside the Ecosystem
Trent Van Epps, a former Ethereum Foundation contributor who spent nearly five years overseeing core development funding, has warned that $ETH's developer ecosystem could face a serious funding shortfall within the next 3 to 9 months. He cited the Foundation's ongoing spending cuts and the expiration of the Client Incentive Program (CIP) as the two primary triggers for the potential crisis.
Van Epps estimates that sustaining Ethereum's core development ecosystem costs roughly $30 million per year. He argues that new institutions and funding mechanisms are now needed, noting that the Ethereum Foundation was never intended to serve as the network's permanent financial backstop.
Departures Add Pressure to an Already Strained Foundation
The warning comes against a backdrop of significant upheaval at the Ethereum Foundation. Van Epps himself departed the organisation in April 2026 after nearly five years, stating he would continue supporting Protocol Guild and Ethereum political economy work as long as funding allows. He was among a wave of senior exits: at least nine researchers and leaders left the Foundation in 2026, including all three of its Protocol Cluster leads.
Protocol Guild, which Van Epps helped build, remains the primary mechanism for compensating independent Ethereum client developers. His departure means the institutional knowledge behind that program now sits outside the Foundation.
Ethereum co-founder Joe Lubin has pushed back on the idea that the situation represents a crisis, arguing the changes reflect a deliberate narrowing of the Foundation's mandate toward core technology stewardship rather than broader commercialisation. The Foundation has also continued issuing grants, with its Q1 2026 allocation report covering work across zero-knowledge proofs, execution clients, and validator security tooling.
Even so, Van Epps' comments raise a pointed question: if the Foundation is cutting its spending footprint and the CIP lapses without a replacement, who funds the engineers that keep Ethereum running? That question is now being actively debated across the Ethereum community.
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