Gean is a Go-based implementation of the Lean Ethereum consensus client. Lean Ethereum is the post-quantum redesign of Ethereum's consensus layer, replacing BLS signatures with XMSS-based post-quantum primitives and simplifying the protocol for greater long-term resilience.
Gean is the first independent Lean Ethereum client built from Africa, developed under Gean Labs — an open-source working group based in Jos, Nigeria. Gean is supported by an Ethereum Foundation Ecosystem Support Program grant (FY26-2432) and coordinates directly with the Lean Ethereum researcher team.
The project contributes to Ethereum's foundational security through client diversity, post-quantum cryptographic readiness, and geographic decentralization of the core developer community.
To strengthen Ethereum's long-term resilience by building an independent, post-quantum-ready Lean consensus client — and to expand the geographic footprint of Ethereum's core protocol developer community by building it from Africa.
Ethereum's resilience depends on having multiple independent consensus client implementations. A network running predominantly one client is vulnerable to single-bug failures, chain splits, and extended downtime. Today, the Lean Ethereum client landscape — Ethereum's post-quantum consensus redesign — is still in early development, with only a small number of independent implementations underway.
Two specific gaps compound this:
Cryptographic resilience. Ethereum's current signing infrastructure relies on BLS signatures, which become vulnerable as quantum computing advances. The Lean Ethereum protocol addresses this with XMSS-based post-quantum signatures, but the protocol requires multiple production-grade implementations to be safe to deploy.
Geographic concentration. Ethereum's core developer community is concentrated in a small number of regions. This creates coordination, regulatory, and operational fragility — the network is stronger when its contributors come from a wider footprint.
The result: Ethereum's most consequential security upgrade in years (post-quantum readiness) needs more independent, geographically diverse client implementations to mature safely toward mainnet.
Gean is an independent Go-based implementation of the Lean Ethereum consensus client that directly addresses these gaps:
We add an independent implementation to the Lean Ethereum client ecosystem alongside peer clients (Zeam, Ream, Qlean, Lantern, and others), strengthening client diversity at the consensus layer.
We implement XMSS-based post-quantum signatures and validator lifecycle management using post-quantum primitives, contributing to the maturation of Ethereum's cryptographic upgrade path.
We are the first Lean Ethereum consensus client built from Africa, expanding the geographic footprint of Ethereum's core protocol contributor base.
Our work is anchored in three concrete milestone areas: spec compliance and multi-client interoperability, post-quantum signature performance and validation, and networking stability for long-running devnet participation. These milestones are formally defined and committed under our Ethereum Foundation grant and tracked publicly through this profile.
The codebase is open source under a permissive license, with no token, no monetization layer, and no commercial gating. Gean is built as a pure public good — the value it creates accrues to every Ethereum user, validator, and dependent ecosystem.
Gean is a public good. It has no token, no fees, no monetization layer, and no commercial gating. The codebase is open source under a permissive license and the value it creates accrues to the Ethereum network as a whole, not to its builders. The team behind Gean (Gean Labs, an unincorporated working group) sustains the project through public-goods grants — currently an Ethereum Foundation Ecosystem Support Program grant (FY26-2432) — and is exploring additional grant-based funding sources to extend runway. Longer term, Gean Labs may build separate commercial products in the Ethereum infrastructure space (e.g., protocol engineering services, staking infrastructure for emerging markets) that would fund continued contributions to Gean as a public good. Those commercial offerings would be developed and funded separately from Gean itself, keeping Gean's status as a non-commercial public good intact.
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