The post Near’s emission vote misses threshold, triggering governance crisis appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. NEAR Protocol, the Layer 1 blockchain, is facing a major disagreement amongst its community members over inflation reduction. The community is divided about how many new NEAR tokens should be printed every year. For months, people in the community have been talking about cutting the network’s inflation rate from 5% to 2.5%. The goal was to balance NEAR token emissions with generated fees. Near is operating at a loss At the moment, the NEAR Protocol pays around $140 million worth of tokens annually to the network validators. But this amount does not make sense compared to NEAR’s total value locked (TVL) and generated revenue. The protocol has around $162 million in total value locked (TVL). To make things worse, NEAR Protocol has a lifetime revenue of only $17 million since its inception in 2020. The protocol generated $259,116 in revenue in the last 30 days based on DeFiLlama data. Securing the network is expensive compared to the generated revenue. That’s why the community is trying to fix this issue. They voted on reducing the inflation rate from 5% to 2.5%. More than 50% of voters said yes, but that’s not enough. The voting result should hit a supermajority, which is 66.67% or more. This is part of the protocol’s required rules to count the proposal as an official change. The vote has technically failed to reduce NEAR’s inflation. Devs might cut NEAR emission Some of NEAR’s core developers are hinting that they might still include the emission cut in the next software update anyway. A validator group called Chorus One called that out, saying it’s basically breaking the rules. They wrote on X, “We believe this sets a dangerous precedent and undermines the integrity of NEAR. It gives the impression that decisions can be unilaterally enforced by the core team.”… The post Near’s emission vote misses threshold, triggering governance crisis appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. NEAR Protocol, the Layer 1 blockchain, is facing a major disagreement amongst its community members over inflation reduction. The community is divided about how many new NEAR tokens should be printed every year. For months, people in the community have been talking about cutting the network’s inflation rate from 5% to 2.5%. The goal was to balance NEAR token emissions with generated fees. Near is operating at a loss At the moment, the NEAR Protocol pays around $140 million worth of tokens annually to the network validators. But this amount does not make sense compared to NEAR’s total value locked (TVL) and generated revenue. The protocol has around $162 million in total value locked (TVL). To make things worse, NEAR Protocol has a lifetime revenue of only $17 million since its inception in 2020. The protocol generated $259,116 in revenue in the last 30 days based on DeFiLlama data. Securing the network is expensive compared to the generated revenue. That’s why the community is trying to fix this issue. They voted on reducing the inflation rate from 5% to 2.5%. More than 50% of voters said yes, but that’s not enough. The voting result should hit a supermajority, which is 66.67% or more. This is part of the protocol’s required rules to count the proposal as an official change. The vote has technically failed to reduce NEAR’s inflation. Devs might cut NEAR emission Some of NEAR’s core developers are hinting that they might still include the emission cut in the next software update anyway. A validator group called Chorus One called that out, saying it’s basically breaking the rules. They wrote on X, “We believe this sets a dangerous precedent and undermines the integrity of NEAR. It gives the impression that decisions can be unilaterally enforced by the core team.”…

Near’s emission vote misses threshold, triggering governance crisis

NEAR Protocol, the Layer 1 blockchain, is facing a major disagreement amongst its community members over inflation reduction.

The community is divided about how many new NEAR tokens should be printed every year. For months, people in the community have been talking about cutting the network’s inflation rate from 5% to 2.5%.

The goal was to balance NEAR token emissions with generated fees.

Near is operating at a loss

At the moment, the NEAR Protocol pays around $140 million worth of tokens annually to the network validators. But this amount does not make sense compared to NEAR’s total value locked (TVL) and generated revenue.

The protocol has around $162 million in total value locked (TVL). To make things worse, NEAR Protocol has a lifetime revenue of only $17 million since its inception in 2020. The protocol generated $259,116 in revenue in the last 30 days based on DeFiLlama data. Securing the network is expensive compared to the generated revenue.

That’s why the community is trying to fix this issue. They voted on reducing the inflation rate from 5% to 2.5%. More than 50% of voters said yes, but that’s not enough. The voting result should hit a supermajority, which is 66.67% or more. This is part of the protocol’s required rules to count the proposal as an official change. The vote has technically failed to reduce NEAR’s inflation.

Devs might cut NEAR emission

Some of NEAR’s core developers are hinting that they might still include the emission cut in the next software update anyway.

A validator group called Chorus One called that out, saying it’s basically breaking the rules. They wrote on X, “We believe this sets a dangerous precedent and undermines the integrity of NEAR. It gives the impression that decisions can be unilaterally enforced by the core team.” To prevent this scenario, Chorus One believes that NEAR validators must be careful about the changes implemented before installing the next software upgrade.

Meanwhile, Louis Thomazeau from L1D Fund defended the idea. He says cutting NEAR’s inflation is just “common sense” and that the token shouldn’t stick to rules so hard it hurts the project.

Now the whole community is split. Some people say NEAR has to follow its own governance system because if it doesn’t, the rules stop meaning anything. Others say the protocol should just do what’s best for survival, even if it bends the rules a little.

In the past, other well-known projects experienced similar situations that caused a split between the community, validators, and devs. Such scenarios could end up in a hard fork, like Ethereum’s split in 2016 after the infamous DAO hack that exploited millions of ETH tokens.

Sometimes, enforcing a manual change could help a protocol survive. In March, a Hyperliquid trader exploited JELLY perpetuals. He basically squeezed the market and caused huge losses for the platform’s HLP vault. The Hyperliquid team delisted the JELLY perps and manually changed the oracle price to close open positions and contain losses.

NEAR is currently up by 1.5% in the past 24 hours and trades at $2.29. The token ranks #52 on CoinGecko and is up by 6.5% in the past seven days. NEAR has a market cap of $2.9 billion and a 24-hour trading volume of $101 million.

The Layer 1 network token is down by 88.8% from its all-time high of $20.44, which was recorded in mid-2022.

The smartest crypto minds already read our newsletter. Want in? Join them.

Source: https://www.cryptopolitan.com/nears-inflation-reduction-plan-stalls/

Market Opportunity
NEAR Logo
NEAR Price(NEAR)
$1.683
$1.683$1.683
-0.70%
USD
NEAR (NEAR) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

SUI Surges From Consolidation, Buyers Regain Control Above $1.78

SUI Surges From Consolidation, Buyers Regain Control Above $1.78

SUI had a good start to 2026 after a long consolidation, finally breaking higher above pivotal support. On the 4-hour timeline, the coin transitioned from relative
Share
Tronweekly2026/01/12 18:05
Shibarium releases security incident update: Specific bridge operations have been restricted, limiting the attacker's short-term BONE token staking

Shibarium releases security incident update: Specific bridge operations have been restricted, limiting the attacker's short-term BONE token staking

PANews reported on September 21st that the Shibarium cross-chain bridge, which connects the Layer 2 network Shibarium and Ethereum, was previously attacked by a flash loan, with approximately $2.4 million in ETH and SHIB stolen. Shibarium has now released a security incident update, stating: 1. Specific bridge operations have been restricted to prevent new unauthorized transactions; 2. Upgrade and restrict potential abuse paths (deposits/withdrawals/claims/rewards) and add targeted defensive controls to prevent abuse of delegated staking; 3. Recover and protect the at-risk BONE held by the staking managers. The attacker’s short-term BONE staking will be effectively restricted by intervention and protocol mechanisms. 4. Rotate validator signers and migrate contract control to multi-party hardware custody; continue the broad migration away from legacy keys; 5. Real-time monitoring of attacker traffic; automatic alerts and reporting to partners and exchanges; 6. Hire independent security researchers, incident response firms, and relevant departments.
Share
PANews2025/09/21 17:26
Trove ICO Rule Changes Allegedly Impact Trader Losses

Trove ICO Rule Changes Allegedly Impact Trader Losses

Allegations of modifications to Trove's ICO rules reportedly influenced significant market reactions, leading to notable trader losses and concerns about fairness
Share
coinlineup2026/01/12 18:44