The layer 2 blockchain network, which has nearly $3 billion in total locked value, stopped producing blocks minutes after Ethereum activated its hard fork Dencun upgrade. But it was back up a little more than an hour later.
Posted March 13, 2024 at 12:05 pm EST.
Layer 2 blockchain network Blast suffered an outage Wednesday morning related to Ethereum’s Dencun upgrade. According to blockchain explorer Blastscan, the Ethereum rollup stopped producing blocks at 10:05 a.m. EST. It had resumed block production by 11:19 a.m.
“The Blast Mainnet has stopped producing blocks due to issues related to Ethereum’s Dencun upgrade,” wrote the Blast team on X. “Core engineering contributors are working on a fix. We’ll share an update and post-mortem once the fix is live.” The Blast team further stated that a fix could be expected within 30 to 60 minutes. Block production resumed roughly 40 minutes after the announcement.
Blast founder Tieshun “Pacman” Roquerre did not immediately respond to a request to comment.
Blast’s outage began only minutes after Ethereum activated its hard fork Dencun upgrade, which is expected to drive down the costs for transacting on layer 2 networks built atop Ethereum’s base layer.
Read more: Ethereum Completes Milestone Dencun Upgrade, Which Should Substantially Reduce Fees
The Ethereum Foundation did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the issues faced by Blast and whether they are affecting any other blockchains.
Blast is the third largest layer 2 blockchain network by total value locked in its smart contract with nearly $3 billion, behind Arbitrum and Optimism, according to data from blockchain analytics website L2Beat.