Ethlabs, a newly established nonprofit research group focused on Ethereum’s core technology, has announced its launch with financial support from Bitmine, Sharplink, Anchorage, Octant, SNZ and other participants across the Ethereum ecosystem.
The organization did not disclose the amount of funding received. Founded by former senior Ethereum Foundation researchers Ansgar Dietrichs, Barnabe Monnot, Caspar Schwarz Schilling, Josh Rudolf and Julian Ma, Ethlabs has been created as an independent institution dedicated to technical research for the Ethereum network.
The launch of Ethlabs comes amid broader changes within Ethereum’s research ecosystem. Earlier concerns about long-term funding for protocol research were raised by a former Ethereum Foundation contributor, who warned of a potential funding shortfall for core development efforts.
The development also follows a period of leadership turnover at the Ethereum Foundation, which has seen eight senior leaders depart over the past five months, including former researcher and executive Hsiao-Wei Wang. Against this backdrop, independent research organizations such as Ethlabs are playing an increasingly prominent role in supporting Ethereum’s technical development.
The launch reflects a broader evolution in Ethereum’s development ecosystem, where independent organizations are increasingly contributing alongside the Ethereum Foundation to support long-term protocol research and infrastructure development.
According to announcement, its structure is designed to provide researchers with a dedicated institution and sustainable funding while allowing them to continue working on core protocol challenges affecting the Ethereum network.
Ethlabs said its research agenda will focus on several key areas of Ethereum development, including settlement speed, network capacity, native asset issuance, cross-chain interoperability and Ethereum’s monetary design.
The founding team includes researchers who have previously contributed to Ethereum’s work on scaling, finality, data availability, protocol economics and virtual machine development.
In a statement accompanying the launch, Executive Director Ansgar Dietrichs said the organization was created to advance Ethereum’s core technology while supporting infrastructure used by institutions, developers and autonomous AI systems.
The group said its research priorities are closely linked to increasing blockchain activity involving stablecoins, tokenized assets, investment products and AI-driven commerce. According to Ethlabs, continued improvements in Ethereum’s underlying infrastructure will be necessary as more financial and commercial activity moves onto public blockchain networks.
Ethereum co-founder Joe Lubin described Ethlabs as another stewardship organization operating alongside the Ethereum Foundation and other independent groups working to advance the network’s development.
The announcement comes as several institutional backers continue increasing their involvement in the Ethereum ecosystem.
Bitmine recently disclosed the acquisition of an additional 52,203 ETH, valued at approximately $90 million, bringing its holdings to roughly 4.7% of Ethereum’s total supply. The company’s support for Ethlabs aligns with its broader commitment to the Ethereum network.
Bitmine Chairman Tom Lee said additional research investment may be needed as Ethereum experiences growing adoption among institutions and AI-powered applications, potentially increasing demand for protocol expertise and technical development.
Sharplink CEO Joseph Chalom linked the company’s funding support to what he described as the early stages of an institutional growth cycle on Ethereum, adding that backing core protocol researchers provides a direct contribution to the network’s long-term development.
Despite receiving funding from corporations and ecosystem participants, Ethlabs said its research activities will remain independent. Contributions will be managed through an external grants administrator responsible for evaluating, screening and distributing funds.
Under the governance structure outlined by the organization, contributors will receive quarterly reports and annual independent audits. However, funders will not have authority over research priorities, technical roadmaps or organizational decisions.
The launch adds another independent research institution to Ethereum’s growing development ecosystem at a time when the network is increasingly serving as infrastructure for stablecoins, tokenized financial products and emerging AI-related applications.

