Polkadot Allocates 993,286 DOT to Boost its Ecosystem and Web3 Development

Polkadot

Popular blockchain protocol Polkadot recently announced the allocation of over $20 million in DOT to boost the development of its ecosystem and the highly anticipated Web3.

Polkadot Allocates $21M For Ecosystem Development

In a press release shared with CryptoPotato, Polkadot noted that the bounty proposal, dubbed the Polkadot Pioneers Prize, is a series of challenges that have been carefully created to push technical innovation on its network.

The first two challenges will be revealed later this year and will include zero-knowledge research and development and Polkadot infrastructure.

So far, the blockchain project has allocated about 993,286 DOT, its native cryptocurrency, worth over $21 million. The funds will be split between the first two challenge categories and subsequent ones.

Leveraging Polkadot’s On-Chain Cash

Polkadot intends to fund its Pioneers Prize initiative using its on-chain treasury, managed by network token holders through on-chain governance.

The treasury currently holds more than 20 million DOT tokens and is designed to fund projects that will benefit the Polkadot ecosystem, such as the Pioneers Prize incentive program.

The Trailblazer Prize aims to address the problem of underutilized Polkadot on-chain cash, given that there are few to no ambitious ideas of what to do with the funds. The proposal seeks to model how the community can achieve greater agency by directing the chain’s treasury funds in new and creative ways.

The Polkadot Pioneers Prize will be overseen by an elected curator and will likely contain representatives from the on-chain treasury council, Parity Technologies, the Web3 Foundation, and other external ecosystem partners.

Polkadot’s Low Carbon Emissions

Meanwhile, a recent research report from the Crypto Carbon Rankings Institute (CCRI) named Polkadot the blockchain network with the lowest electricity consumption and total carbon emissions per year.

The CCRI analyzed six blockchain networks that utilize the Proof-of-Stake (PoS) consensus mechanism to determine how much electricity they consume and the level of carbon emissions they produce. Among the blockchains analyzed were Solana, Polkadot, Tezos, Avalanche, Cardano, and Algorand.

For a very long time, power consumption by blockchain networks has been a controversial issue. Last year, electric car maker Tesla stopped accepting bitcoin payments due to power consumption concerns.

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