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Bitmine, Sharplink and Joe Lubin Back Ethereum R&D Nonprofit



Ethlabs, a newly launched Ethereum-focused research and development nonprofit, says it was created to help prepare the network for what it describes as the next wave of institutional adoption. Backed by former Ethereum Foundation contributors and funded by firms including Bitmine and Sharplink—along with support from Ethereum co-founder Joe Lubin—the initiative is positioned as a dedicated, long-term home for core technical work.



Sharplink said in its announcement that Ethlabs exists to ensure Ethereum can absorb increasing on-chain activity at scale, pointing to the growing movement of stablecoins, tokenized real-world assets, funds, and autonomous AI commerce onto public networks. The launch arrives amid renewed attention to Ethereum’s governance and funding challenges, including warnings from former Ethereum Foundation contributor Trenton Van Epps about a potential “slow-burning funding crisis.”



Key takeaways



  • Ethlabs is a new nonprofit designed to support Ethereum’s research and core development with stable, long-term funding.

  • Its backers include Sharplink, Bitmine, and Ethereum co-founder Joe Lubin, alongside former senior Ethereum Foundation researchers.

  • The announcement frames Ethereum as a “neutral, credibly permissionless settlement layer” for institutional on-chain activity.

  • The timing underscores ongoing scrutiny of Ethereum Foundation resources and leadership turnover.



A dedicated institutional-ready R&D push


Ethlabs was launched to “ready Ethereum for the next phase of institutional adoption,” according to Sharplink’s statement. In that framing, Ethereum’s role expands beyond a base layer for crypto-native trading and apps—toward the settlement layer for global financial activity as more assets and services migrate on-chain.



Sharplink emphasized that as stablecoins and tokenized assets grow in use, demand is increasingly converging on Ethereum. Ethlabs’ stated goal is to make sure the network is technically prepared for that shift, particularly in terms of scaling and readiness for enterprise-grade usage.



The organization was presented as a continuation of research work traditionally tied to Ethereum’s deepest infrastructure and upgrade cycles. Sharplink said Ethlabs brings together technologists who have helped guide the network through major upgrades over the past decade, and that the project offers that work a more “institutional” structure with stable funding rather than relying exclusively on short-term cycles.



Who’s behind Ethlabs


Ethlabs was co-founded by five former senior Ethereum Foundation researchers: Ansgar Dietrichs, Barnabé Monnot, Caspar Schwarz-Schilling, Josh Rudolf, and Julian Ma. The nonprofit is also tied to funding support from Bitmine and Sharplink, according to Ethlabs’ launch announcement.



Joe Lubin, an Ethereum co-founder, said Ethereum is “entering its next stage of evolution,” and argued that multiple “steward nodes of Ethereum” should help grow the blockchain’s utilization. In his statement, he linked Ethlabs directly to a long-term effort to support independent research and development aligned with Ethereum’s core values.



Lubin added that giving researchers and developers “a long-term, independent home” could be instrumental in preparing Ethereum for the “next major wave of adoption.” The implication is that Ethlabs is meant not only to contribute technical research, but also to preserve continuity of expertise during periods when institutional attention and funding structures are under pressure.



Context: renewed debate over Ethereum Foundation funding


The Ethlabs launch comes just days after Trenton Van Epps—described as a former Ethereum Foundation contributor—warned Ethereum could face a “core development funding crisis.” His concern fits into broader commentary that Ethereum may be drifting toward a funding squeeze for long-term protocol work.



At the Foundation level, the issue has been publicly discussed before. Earlier this year, Vitalik Buterin stated that the Ethereum Foundation’s resources were limited, noting it held about 0.16% of the total supply of ether (ETH). While the figure alone doesn’t determine whether core development is funded adequately, it has become part of the public narrative about whether the Foundation’s current structure and holdings can sustain the ecosystem’s ongoing engineering demands.



Leadership changes have also kept pressure on Ethereum’s institutional arrangements. The article notes an ongoing wave of departures from the Ethereum Foundation, most recently the departure of co-executive director Hsiao-Wei Wang, who left last week.



Crypto educator David Hoffman was cited as saying the Foundation was “intentionally leaving a power vacuum” for new structures to step in and influence Ethereum’s direction. Hoffman added that Ethlabs’ approach represents a “brightest future” for Ethereum—commentary that reflects a belief that the new nonprofit could help stabilize or reshape how long-term research is supported.



What investors and builders should watch next


For market participants and builders, the real question is how Ethlabs’ “institutional home” translates into measurable continuity for Ethereum development. The narrative emphasizes stable funding and dedicated research leadership, which—if sustained—could reduce the risk of stop-start engineering cycles that can slow protocol work.



At the same time, the timing suggests Ethlabs is attempting to address not only technical scaling needs, but also the ecosystem’s trust and governance concerns around who funds and stewards the next phase of Ethereum’s roadmap. With public debate ongoing about Ethereum Foundation resource constraints and the direction of core development, Ethlabs may become one of the key organizations shaping the next chapter.



Ether price performance is also part of the broader backdrop mentioned in the report, with ETH trading about 65% below its peak near $1,700, levels last seen in October 2023 and April 2025, amid what the article characterizes as “crypto winter” sentiment lows. While price doesn’t validate a development strategy on its own, funding concerns and builder incentives often become more acute when market conditions are weak.



Readers should watch whether Ethlabs moves beyond announcements into sustained research output, clear funding commitments, and ongoing collaboration with Ethereum’s broader development ecosystem. The organization’s success will likely depend on whether it can maintain long-term support while demonstrating concrete technical contributions that match the network’s scaling and institutional adoption priorities.



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