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network-states-and-pop-up-cities
Blog

The Future of Public Utilities: Automated and On-Chain

A technical analysis of how blockchain-based P2P markets will dismantle centralized utilities for energy, water, and bandwidth, replacing them with transparent, automated settlement systems.

introduction
THE SHIFT

Introduction

Blockchain infrastructure is evolving from raw protocols to automated, intent-driven public utilities.

Infrastructure is becoming a utility. The value accrual is shifting from base-layer consensus to the automated services built on top, mirroring the transition from power grids to the applications they enable.

Automation replaces manual orchestration. Developers no longer manually manage cross-chain liquidity or validator sets; protocols like Across and Stargate abstract this into a service layer.

The new stack is intent-based. Users declare outcomes (e.g., 'swap X for Y cheapest'), and systems like UniswapX and CowSwap solve for them, outsourcing execution to a competitive solver network.

Evidence: The $7.5B Total Value Secured (TVS) in EigenLayer restaking demonstrates demand for programmable trust, not just passive staking.

thesis-statement
THE ARCHITECTURAL SHIFT

The Core Argument: From Monolithic Providers to Dynamic P2P Markets

Blockchain infrastructure is evolving from centralized, monolithic providers to decentralized, automated peer-to-peer markets.

Monolithic providers like AWS currently dominate by bundling services, creating single points of failure and rent extraction. This model is antithetical to the decentralized ethos of the applications they host.

The future is dynamic P2P markets where services like RPC calls, indexing, and block building are auctioned in real-time. This mirrors the evolution from centralized exchanges to DEX aggregators like 1inch.

Automation via smart contracts eliminates human gatekeepers. Services become permissionless commodities, with quality and price determined by on-chain reputation and staking mechanisms, not corporate sales teams.

Evidence: The rise of intent-based architectures in protocols like UniswapX and Across proves the demand. Users express a desired outcome, and a decentralized solver network competes to fulfill it at the best cost.

deep-dive
THE SETTLEMENT LAYER

Mechanics of an Automated Utility: Settlement as the Killer App

On-chain public utilities automate value transfer by abstracting complexity into a universal settlement guarantee.

Settlement is the atomic unit of automated utility. Every transaction, from a token swap to an NFT mint, resolves as a state update on a ledger. This finality is the non-negotiable core that all other services, like Uniswap for liquidity or Aave for lending, depend upon.

Automation replaces manual processes with deterministic code. A user's intent, routed through a solver network like CowSwap or UniswapX, is executed and settled on-chain without human intervention. This creates a trust-minimized pipeline where the outcome is guaranteed by the protocol, not a counterparty.

The killer app is not the service, but the settlement. Protocols compete on execution quality, but they all converge on the same settlement layers—Ethereum, Solana, Arbitrum. The utility's value accrues to the base settlement guarantee, which becomes a commoditized, automated public good.

Evidence: Over 90% of DeFi's $50B+ TVL settles on Ethereum or its L2s. The growth of intent-based architectures and cross-chain settlement via LayerZero and Axelar proves the demand for abstracted, automated finality across networks.

THE FUTURE OF PUBLIC UTILITIES: AUTOMATED AND ON-CHAIN

Utility Protocol Landscape: Market Positioning & Key Metrics

Comparative analysis of leading protocols automating core blockchain utility functions: bridging, swapping, and gas abstraction.

Core Utility / MetricLayerZero (Omnichain)Across (UMA Optimistic)UniswapX (Intent-Based)

Primary Function

Generic message passing & bridging

Optimistic token bridging

Intents-based DEX aggregation

Settlement Finality

Configurable (Optimistic/ZK)

Optimistic (20 min challenge)

Optimistic (variable off-chain)

Fee Model

Native gas + protocol fee

Relayer fee + LP spread

Filler competition (Dutch auction)

Avg. Bridge Cost (ETH->Arb)

$3-7

$1-3

N/A (Swap)

Avg. Fill Latency

3-5 min

1-3 min

< 30 sec

Native Gas Abstraction

Capital Efficiency

Locked in remote chains

Capital pooled on mainnet

No locked liquidity

Key Risk Profile

Validator set security

Oracle & disputer liveness

Filler MEV & censorship

risk-analysis
THE HARD PROBLEMS

The Bear Case: Why This Might Not Work (Yet)

The vision of automated, on-chain public goods faces non-trivial scaling, governance, and incentive hurdles that could stall adoption.

01

The Oracle Problem for Real-World Data

On-chain automation requires reliable, tamper-proof data feeds for execution triggers. Current oracle solutions like Chainlink and Pyth face a trilemma: decentralization, latency, and cost. For public utilities requiring sub-second, high-frequency data (e.g., energy grids), this is unsolved.

  • Centralization Risk: Reliance on a handful of node operators creates a single point of failure.
  • Latency vs. Finality: Fast data isn't always finalized data, leading to potential exploits.
  • Cost Prohibitive: High-frequency data feeds are economically unviable for many public sector use cases.
~500ms
Typical Latency
$1M+
Annual Feed Cost
02

The Regulatory Moat

Public utilities are defined by legal frameworks, not code. On-chain automation collides with jurisdictional sovereignty, liability assignment, and compliance (e.g., OFAC sanctions). A smart contract cannot be subpoenaed.

  • Legal Personhood: Who is liable when an automated system fails? DAO governance is not a recognized legal entity.
  • Sovereign Override: Any government can forcibly halt an "immutable" system within its physical borders.
  • Compliance Drag: Integrating AML/KYC and reporting destroys the permissionless, composable benefits.
0
Legal Precedents
100%
Sovereign Risk
03

Incentive Misalignment & MEV

Public utilities require predictable, fair outcomes. Blockchain execution, dominated by proposer-builder separation (PBS) and maximal extractable value (MEV), inherently optimizes for profit, not public good. This creates systemic risk.

  • Economic Censorship: Validators can exclude transactions based on profit, not priority.
  • Front-Running Critical Infrastructure: Bots will exploit latency in systems like disaster response payouts.
  • Staking Centralization: The capital requirements for Ethereum or Solana validators recreate the centralized gatekeepers web3 aims to replace.
$1B+
Annual MEV
3 Entities
Control >50% Staking
04

The Complexity Death Spiral

To solve the above, systems become over-engineered, fragile, and opaque. Adding layers of ZK-proofs, optimistic fraud proofs, and interchain messaging (LayerZero, Axelar) increases attack surfaces and moves trust from simple institutions to complex, unauditable code.

  • Verifier's Dilemma: Who watches the watchers? Fraud proofs and ZK verifiers must be trusted.
  • Cross-Chain Fragility: Bridges like Wormhole and Nomad have been exploited for >$2B total.
  • Cognitive Overload: No city council can reasonably audit a stack involving 10+ protocol layers.
10+
Protocol Layers
$2B+
Bridge Exploits
future-outlook
THE INFRASTRUCTURE

The Network State Endgame: Pop-Up Cities as First Adopters

Network states will bootstrap adoption by deploying fully automated, on-chain public utilities that legacy cities cannot match.

Network states deploy on-chain primitives as their core infrastructure. They bypass legacy procurement and build with composable DeFi protocols like Aave for credit and Chainlink for oracles from day one.

Automation replaces bureaucratic bloat. Smart contracts on networks like Arbitrum or Base manage utilities—water rights, energy grids, waste management—with deterministic, auditable logic, eliminating corruption and inefficiency.

Pop-up cities are the ultimate stress test. A Zuzalu-style experimental community adopting a fully on-chain treasury via Safe provides real-world data on scalability and user experience that no testnet can replicate.

Evidence: Arbitrum processes over 2M transactions daily, demonstrating the throughput required for city-scale utility management without congesting the base Ethereum layer.

takeaways
THE FUTURE OF PUBLIC UTILITIES

TL;DR for Busy Builders

Infrastructure is moving from manual, opaque governance to automated, transparent protocols. Here's what to build.

01

The Problem: Opaque, Inefficient Governance

Legacy public goods funding (Gitcoin Grants, protocol treasuries) is slow, political, and suffers from voter apathy. Decision latency is weeks, with high overhead.

  • Voter Turnout: Often <5% of token holders.
  • Allocation Lag: Months between proposal and execution.
  • Administrative Overhead: ~20-30% of funds lost to process.
<5%
Voter Turnout
~30%
Process Waste
02

The Solution: Retroactive Public Goods Funding (RPGF)

Pioneered by Optimism's Collective, RPGF flips the model: fund what's already proven useful. It uses on-chain data to reward builders post-hoc, creating a flywheel.

  • Eliminates Speculation: Funds real usage, not promises.
  • Aligns Incentives: Builders focus on utility, not grant proposals.
  • Data-Driven: Allocates based on hard metrics like TVL secured, transactions enabled.
$500M+
OP Allocated
10x
Efficiency Gain
03

The Problem: Fragmented Liquidity Silos

Every new L2 or appchain fragments liquidity and composability. Bridging is a UX nightmare and security risk, creating $2B+ in bridge hack liabilities.

  • Capital Inefficiency: Assets stuck in bridge contracts.
  • Security Surface: Each bridge is a new attack vector.
  • Developer Friction: Must integrate N bridges for N chains.
$2B+
Bridge Hack Liab.
7+ Days
Withdrawal Delays
04

The Solution: Native Yield-Bearing Stablecoin Protocols

Protocols like Ethena's USDe and Mountain Protocol's USDM create capital-efficient, chain-agnostic base money. They turn idle collateral into productive assets.

  • Native Yield: Earns yield at the protocol level (~5-15% APY).
  • Cross-Chain Native: Minted natively on multiple L2s (Arbitrum, Base).
  • Reduces Fragmentation: Serves as unified, yield-bearing collateral across DeFi.
$2B+
USDe TVL
~10% APY
Native Yield
05

The Problem: Centralized Sequencer Risk

Most L2s (Arbitrum, Optimism, Base) run a single, centralized sequencer. This creates a single point of failure for censorship and liveness, betraying decentralization promises.

  • Censorship Risk: Sequencer can reorder or exclude transactions.
  • Liveness Risk: If it goes down, the chain halts.
  • MEV Extraction: Value flows to a single entity.
100%
Of Major L2s
~0s
Finality If Down
06

The Solution: Shared Sequencing Layers (Espresso, Astria)

Decentralized sequencing networks that multiple rollups can outsource to. They provide credible neutrality, MEV resistance, and atomic cross-rollup composability.

  • Interop Composability: Enables atomic transactions across rollups.
  • MEV Redistribution: MEV can be captured and redistributed to the public goods treasury.
  • Fault Tolerance: No single point of failure.
~500ms
Proposal Time
>100
Rollup Capacity
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