Key Highlights
- The Ethereum Economic Zone (EEZ) debuted at EthCC in Cannes, backed by Gnosis, Zisk, and the Ethereum Foundation
- The framework enables direct interaction between Ethereum layer-2 networks within single transactions, eliminating bridge dependencies
- More than 20 layer-2 networks currently hold approximately $40 billion in aggregate value across isolated environments
- Vitalik Buterin has expressed concerns about Ethereum’s existing L2 strategy and called for fundamental changes
- A new “EEZ Alliance” will establish standards and promote widespread implementation throughout the ecosystem
Ethereum developers have introduced a comprehensive framework targeting a critical infrastructure challenge: layer-2 networks currently function as disconnected ecosystems.
https://twitter.com/BSCNews/status/2038492417863909564?s=20
The initiative, known as the Ethereum Economic Zone (EEZ), made its debut at the EthCC conference in Cannes on March 29. Gnosis, Zisk, and the Ethereum Foundation are leading the development effort.
Currently, Ethereum leverages layer-2 networks to increase transaction throughput while reducing costs. These networks — such as Arbitrum, Base, and Optimism — function as standalone systems. Transferring assets among them necessitates using bridges, which introduce delays, additional costs, and security vulnerabilities.
The EEZ framework offers an alternative approach. It enables smart contracts deployed across different layer-2 networks to communicate directly and execute operations in real time, bypassing bridge infrastructure entirely, while maintaining final settlement on [[LINK_START_0]]Ethereum’s[[LINK_END_0]] primary chain.
The initiative also maintains ETH as the primary fee token across the integrated ecosystem, avoiding the introduction of additional tokens.
According to L2BEAT data, over 20 operational layer-2 networks collectively secure nearly $40 billion in total value locked. This substantial capital remains distributed across disconnected platforms rather than forming a cohesive liquidity pool.
Friederike Ernst, co-founder of Gnosis, explained: “Ethereum faces a fragmentation challenge rather than a scaling limitation. Each additional L2 creates an isolated environment that complicates seamless expansion and reduces value flow back to the Ethereum mainnet.”
Impact on Development Teams and End Users
Developers gain significant advantages through the EEZ framework, as they can avoid duplicating infrastructure work across multiple individual networks. Shared tooling and infrastructure become accessible across rollup environments.
Users benefit from an integrated experience where multiple Ethereum networks operate as a cohesive platform rather than fragmented systems.
Vitalik Buterin’s Perspective on Current L2 Architecture
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has publicly discussed shortcomings in the existing L2 framework. In a February 3 statement on X, he declared: “The original vision of L2s and their role in Ethereum no longer makes sense, and we need a new path.”
[[LINK_START_0]]https://twitter.com/VitalikButerin/status/2018711006394843585?s=20[[LINK_END_0]]
His observations sparked varied responses among layer-2 development teams. Karl Floersch from Optimism recognized that L2s must advance beyond basic scaling functions. Steven Goldfeder from Offchain Labs, the team behind Arbitrum, maintained that scaling remains a fundamental priority.
The EEZ framework directly responds to Buterin’s observations by prioritizing consolidated liquidity, shared infrastructure resources, and enhanced user experience pathways.
An “EEZ Alliance” is being established to convene ecosystem stakeholders for coordinating technical standards and facilitating implementation.
Detailed technical specifications and performance metrics are anticipated in upcoming weeks.

