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Ethena Risk Committee "Slimming" Plan: From 5 to 3 Members, How Will Governance Efficiency Be Upgraded
Ethena Labs Research proposes reducing the Risk Committee members from 5 to 3, requiring ENA token holders to vote before next week’s election. This is a fine-tuning of governance efficiency; behind this seemingly simple numerical change, it reflects the project’s consideration of operational refinement amid ecosystem expansion.
Core Content of the Governance Proposal
Ethena’s proposed adjustment includes two key changes:
Voting Structure Change
If the proposal passes, ENA and sENA holders will elect 3 voting members, and Ethena Labs Research will become a non-voting advisory role. If not approved, the current system of 5 voting members remains.
Clarification of Roles and Responsibilities
The proposers believe that reducing members facilitates clearer division of responsibilities in areas such as:
Why “Slim Down”
This proposal is not arbitrary; there are two considerations behind it.
Trade-off in Operational Efficiency
Reducing from 5 to 3 members embodies the principle of “small but refined.” Fewer members mean shorter decision-making chains, clearer responsibility boundaries, and well-defined roles. In Ethena’s ecosystem, the Risk Committee needs to make quick judgments on multiple dimensions like DeFi exposure, reserve funds, and partnerships. Too many members could hinder efficiency.
Upgrading Incentive Mechanisms
The proposal explicitly states that reducing members will allow the Ethena Foundation to increase the compensation of remaining members, encouraging them to invest more resources. This is a classic incentive design: higher pay to motivate stronger professional commitment and responsibility. For work requiring focus and expertise, such as risk management, this adjustment is reasonable.
Governance Considerations in the Ecosystem Context
From related news, Ethena’s ecosystem is accelerating its expansion. Recently, Korea’s top five exchanges have launched USDe stablecoins, and Sui Group has partnered with Ethena to launch SuiUSDE, indicating broader application scenarios.
In this context, the complexity of the Risk Committee’s work is actually increasing—assessing more partner risks and more complex DeFi exposures. This makes efficient, professional decision-making mechanisms even more necessary. From this perspective, “slimming down” may be an active adjustment to adapt to increased business complexity.
How to View the Voting Outcome
This proposal requires ENA token holder voting, scheduled before next week’s election. Based on the design logic, Ethena Labs Research’s stance is already clear—they believe this adjustment is necessary. But the final decision rests with the token holders.
It is worth noting that if approved, Ethena Labs Research will shift from voting member to non-voting advisor, softening their role. This design retains their influence while avoiding conflicts of interest, offering a relatively balanced solution.
Summary
This governance adjustment is fundamentally about efficiency optimization. Moving from 5 to 3 members is not just a “layoff” but an effort to improve incentives based on clearer role division. For ENA holders, the key is to evaluate whether a more efficient, incentivized Risk Committee can better protect protocol security and user funds. The outcome of this vote will directly impact Ethena’s future governance and operational model.