Arbitrum, the leading Ethereum layer-2 protocol, has unveiled a groundbreaking initiative aimed at boosting liquidity in decentralized finance (DeFi). The program, known as the DeFi Renaissance Incentive Program (DRIP), was officially announced on September 3 and is set to allocate up to $40 million in rewards for users engaging in specific on-chain activities, as opposed to merely seeking attention.
Developed by Entropy and supported by Merkl, DRIP will be overseen by Entropy Advisors under the governance of ArbitrumDAO. To facilitate the program, approximately 80 million ARB tokens have been designated for incentives distributed across four distinct “seasons,” each targeting different facets of DeFi.
The inaugural season kicks off on September 3, 2025, and will extend until January 20, 2026. It will concentrate on leveraging borrowing in lending markets, with users given the opportunity to earn as much as 24 million ARB tokens by borrowing against yield-bearing ETH and stablecoin assets on approved platforms. This performance-based and protocol-agnostic structure aims to incentivize borrowing demand across various markets rather than funneling liquidity into a single venue.
Participating platforms include prominent players like Aave, Morpho, Fluid, Euler, Dolomite, and Silo, which will accept collateral options such as wstETH, eUSDC, and USDe.
This incentive program arrives at a critical juncture, as competition intensifies among Ethereum scaling solutions. Data from analytics platform Growthepie reveals that nearly 13% of Ethereum’s application revenue now comes from layer-2 networks, underscoring the importance of these solutions in the broader Ethereum ecosystem.
Arbitrum currently holds a commanding position within this rapidly evolving landscape. According to metrics provided by L2beat, the total value secured within Arbitrum exceeds $19.1 billion, significantly outpacing competitors such as Coinbase’s Base at $14.7 billion and OP Mainnet at $3.6 billion. These figures highlight the quick maturation of Ethereum’s layer-2 ecosystem, where networks are fiercely competing to attract developers, users, and liquidity at an unprecedented scale.
In response to the increasing fragmentation across these networks, the Ethereum Foundation has initiated steps to foster interoperability. On August 29, it announced the Ethereum Interoperability Layer (EIL), a trustless framework designed to facilitate transactions across various layer-2 solutions. The Foundation emphasized that EIL aims to provide users with a seamless “one Ethereum” experience while upholding fundamental principles such as censorship resistance, privacy, and the ethos of open-source development.