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On Ethereum, gas units serve as a proxy measure of the computational resources required for transactions. Each transaction consumes varying amounts of bandwidth, storage, processing power, and memory in the transaction settlement process. This is paid by the various network participants that relay, validate, and audit transactions. In order to estimate a transaction’s resource cost, and make sure transactors pay up for their use of network resources, the Ethereum protocol created a representative unit called gas.
The Ethereum gas system contains a marketplace where gas prices are determined by supply and demand, depending on the real-world utility of the transactions using network resources. When users submit transactions, they compete for limited block space by offering gas fees. Transactions that provide higher real-world value — such as financial transfers, NFT sales, or decentralized finance (DeFi) operations — tend to increase the demand for gas, driving up prices. Users posting such high value transactions are willing to pay higher fees to ensure their transactions are processed quickly, creating a dynamic where the utility of a transaction influences its cost.
The fees that are algorithmically determined based on network demand are called base gas fees. Additionally, when a block reaches capacity, users can add a priority fee (tip) to bid for faster inclusion in the next block. This dual system allows gas prices to reflect the economic value of activities on Ethereum, ensuring that computational resources are allocated efficiently to transactions with tangible utility, fostering valuable applications on the network.