The Cardano Foundation has canceled its planned 2026 flagship summit in Singapore. This was due to the network’s community voting down a multimillion-dollar treasury funding proposal.
The decision is quite notable for Cardano’s post-Voltaire era. It shows that even the initiatives backed by the ecosystem’s core leadership can face the absolute veto power of token holders.
The power of decentralization
The much-hyped summit got canceled after a revised treasury funding proposal for 7.8 million ADA (~$2 million) failed to hit the approval threshold.
Cardano Summit Canceled After Treasury Funding Fails
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There was a rather heated community debate over fiscal responsibility and promotional return on investment (ROI).
Initially, the Cardano Foundation submitted a proposal seeking roughly 14 million ADA to finance the standalone Cardano Summit and a sponsorship at the massive TOKEN2049 Singapore conference in October 2026.
The Foundation slashed the request by 22% down to 7.8 million ADA.
The public endorsements from Cardano architect Charles Hoskinson and Cardano Foundation CEO Frederik Gregaard did not help to sway the community. Active Delegated Representatives (DReps) held the line. The on-chain vote concluded at roughly 65.21% approval.
The failure to hold the summit has been framed as a win for decentralized governance by some. However, critics insist that the cancellation is a significant blow to Cardano’s institutional power in Asia.
Traditional corporate entities in Web2 are capable of forking out millions for marketing. At the same time, decentralized networks like Cardano frequently see their native treasuries transformed into political battlegrounds.
