What Makes Hedera's Enterprise Adoption Strategy Different From Ethereum's?

Hedera and Ethereum court enterprises in different ways. Here's how their governance, consensus, and 2026 institutional strategies compare.
Soumen Datta
July 9, 2026
Table of Contents
Hedera's core difference from Ethereum is governance. Hedera runs on a permissioned council of large organizations, including Google, IBM, and Boeing, that vote on network changes and operate nodes. Ethereum runs on a permissionless, proof-of-stake network where anyone can validate, and institutional outreach happens through independent nonprofits rather than a formal member council.
How Do The Two Networks Handle Governance?
Hedera's Governing Council sets policy, funds development, and vouches for the network's stability, which appeals to regulated industries that need a clear point of accountability. Hedera also donated its codebase, Project Hiero, to the Linux Foundation, separating open-source stewardship from council governance.
Ethereum takes the opposite path. No single entity controls it. Instead, groups have formed around specific enterprise needs:
- The Enterprise Ethereum Alliance (EEA), a member organization coordinating business use cases
- Ethereum Institutional, an independent nonprofit launched July 1, 2026, by former Ethereum Foundation staff David Walsh, Marius Smith, and Matthew Dawson, backed by BitMine, SharpLink, and Joseph Lubin
- EthLabs, a separate group focused on settlement speed and mainnet capacity
This split emerged as the Ethereum Foundation narrowed its scope, cutting its workforce by 20% and its budget by 40%, and pushed ecosystem functions to independent organizations.
What Are The Technical Differences That Matter To Enterprises?
Hedera uses hashgraph consensus rather than a traditional blockchain, which the network has positioned as a way to offer predictable, low transaction fees. This predictability is a selling point for firms running high-volume, low-margin operations.
Ethereum secures itself through proof-of-stake and scales through Layer 2 rollups. Its 2026 roadmap includes two upgrades:
- Glamsterdam, which adjusts gas pricing and expands data capacity for rollups
- Hegota, planned for late 2026, which introduces Verkle Trees to cut node storage costs
The Pectra and Dencun upgrades already cut Layer 2 fees by as much as 75%, narrowing Hedera's cost advantage in some use cases.
Where Is Each Network Actually Being Used?
Hedera reports over $10 billion in real-world asset settlements and says it leads blockchain networks in RWA developer activity. Specific deployments include:
- A UK trial where Lloyds Banking Group and Aberdeen used tokenized funds and gilts as FX trade collateral
- Georgia's transfer of its national property registry onto the network
- The Hedera Enterprise Adoption Team (HEAT), led by Rob Allen, formed to move enterprise pilots into production
- Blockchain for Energy earning ISO/IEC 27001 certification, with Standard Bank and Shinhan Bank also using the network for cross-border remittances
Ethereum's institutional activity centers on DeFi, stablecoin settlement, and tokenized assets, where it holds the largest total value locked of any smart contract platform. The CLARITY Act, passed in July 2025, classified ETH as a digital commodity, giving US institutions regulatory footing Hedera has pursued through its own ETF and partnership route, including the Canary Capital HBAR ETF, live on Nasdaq since October 2025.
Where Do Their Tokens Stand Today?
As of early July 2026, HBAR trades in the $0.07 to $0.08 range, with analysts watching that zone for a confirmed shift in market structure. ETH trades below its 20-day, 50-day, and 100-day moving averages, which are clustered between $1,665 and $1,994 and now act as resistance, though it posted a roughly 7.5% gain over the last seven days. On Hedera specifically, some enterprise deployments run on prepaid accounts that don't touch the open network, meaning adoption can grow without a matching rise in on-chain HBAR demand.
Conclusion
Hedera and Ethereum solve enterprise adoption from opposite directions. Hedera offers a governed, predictable environment through its council and low-fee model, evidenced by RWA settlements and government-scale deployments like Georgia's land registry.
Ethereum offers open, permissionless infrastructure with the deepest liquidity and developer base, now supported by dedicated nonprofits like Ethereum Institutional and EthLabs. Enterprises choosing between them are weighing control and predictability against neutrality and scale.
Resources
- Blog post by Hedera: Quarterly Events Highlights Q1 2026
- Report by CoinDesk: Ethereum gets a new nonprofit focused on institutional adoption
- Report by AInvest: Ethereum's 2026 roadmap and its implications for institutional adoption
- Official site by Enterprise Ethereum Alliance: Driving Ethereum adoption in business
- Market data by CoinMarketCap: Latest Hedera news, HBAR future outlook, trends and market insights
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Frequently Asked Questions
Is Hedera or Ethereum better for enterprise use?
Neither is universally better. Hedera suits firms wanting governed oversight and predictable transaction costs; Ethereum suits firms wanting open, permissionless infrastructure with deep liquidity.
What is Hedera's Governing Council?
It's a group of global organizations, including Google, IBM, and Boeing, that vote on network policy and operate Hedera's nodes.
What is Ethereum Institutional?
It's an independent nonprofit launched July 1, 2026, by former Ethereum Foundation staff to give banks and asset managers a dedicated point of contact for Ethereum adoption.
Disclaimer
Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent the views of BSCN. The information provided in this article is for educational and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice, or advice of any kind. BSCN assumes no responsibility for any investment decisions made based on the information provided in this article. If you believe that the article should be amended, please reach out to the BSCN team by emailing [email protected].
Author
Soumen DattaSoumen has been a crypto researcher since 2020 and holds a master’s in Physics. His writing and research has been published by publications such as CryptoSlate and DailyCoin, as well as BSCN. His areas of focus include Bitcoin, DeFi, and high-potential altcoins like Ethereum, Solana, XRP, and Chainlink. He combines analytical depth with journalistic clarity to deliver insights for both newcomers and seasoned crypto readers.
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