
Ethereum maintains dominance in DeFi and NFTs, but must innovate quickly amid competition from rival layer 1 chains.
Ethereum officially turned ten on Wednesday.
In a 2013 white paper, then nineteen-year-old Vitalik Buterin originally proposed a decentralised platform, envisioning it to be capable of more than Bitcoin’s limited scripting.
The project was developed by a team of eight co-founders and funded through a 2014 ICO that raised over US$18 million (AU$27.93 million). The network’s mainnet, dubbed Frontier, officially launched on 30 July 2015 as a programmable blockchain capable of executing smart contracts. It has since grown to become the second-largest cryptocurrency by market cap.
Highs, Lows and Hard Forks
The platform’s history has been marked by dramatic moments. In 2016, The DAO – a decentralised investment fund – was hacked for US$60 million (AU$93.1 million), triggering a controversial hard fork that split the chain into Ethereum and Ethereum Classic. During the 2017-2018 ICO boom, Ethereum’s ERC-20 standard enabled rapid token launches, pushing ETH’s value to nearly US$1,450 (AU$2,250) before crashing below US$100 (AU$155) after regulatory crackdowns.
The DeFi boom in 2020 saw protocols like Uniswap and Compound gain popularity, followed by a 2021 NFT surge that saw Beeple’s NFT art sell for US$69 million (AU$107.07 million) and ETH climb to a peak of US$4,891 (AU$7,592).
Today’s Ecosystem and Future Potential
Ethereum’s major technical breakthrough came in 2022 with the Merge, shifting from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake and reducing energy usage by over 99%. This paved the way for rollups and L2 solutions, which scaled throughput but fragmented liquidity.
In 2025, ETH trades at around US$3,800 (AU$5,896), lifted by ETF inflows and institutional adoption. Companies like JPMorgan and Robinhood now use Ethereum for stablecoins and tokenisation. The Ethereum Foundation has marked the anniversary with global meetups and an NFT torch that is passed daily between community wallets.
Projections for ETH remain bullish. Analysts suggest ETH could reach US$15,000 (AU$23,275) by 2030 or beyond, driven by financial innovation and the network’s entrenched role in crypto infrastructure.
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