While critics slam crypto for massive energy waste, XRP Ledgers numbers tell a different story.
Fresh data from an XRP Ledger dUNL Validator highlights XRPLs minimal environmental impact.
The entire networks carbon footprint equals just one Boeing 747 transatlantic flight, while a single XRPL transaction uses electricity comparable to powering an LED light for merely one millisecond.
As of September 1st, the network recorded annual emissions of just 63 tCO₂e, with each transaction producing a mere 8.1 mgCO₂e. Electricity usage was equally minimal, and recorded 493,677 kWh annually, with each transaction consuming only 0.020 Wh.
According to the XRPLs official website, the XRP Ledger is the worlds first major global carbon-neutral public blockchain, which is designed to remain eco-friendly without compromising security, decentralization, or scalability.
Unlike traditional blockchains, XRPLs consensus mechanism eliminates energy-intensive mining, and the small amount of energy it consumes is offset with carbon credits through EW Zero, an open-source tool that enables blockchains to decarbonize by purchasing renewable energy across the world.
The XRP Ledger closed the second quarter of 2025 on a record-setting note, particularly in real-world assets (RWAs), where the networks market cap hit $131.6 million, according to Messari. This growth was driven by new launches announced at XRPL Apex in Singapore, including Ondos OUSG tokenized treasury fund, Guggenheims digital commercial paper, and Ctrl Alts tokenized real estate.
While RWAs provided momentum, overall network activity presented a mixed picture. Active user engagement slowed, as evidenced by a 41% drop in average daily active addresses to 75,200, while new addresses plunged 46.2% to 305,800. Daily transactions also fell 20% to 1.6 million. However, total addresses grew 4% quarter-on-quarter to 6.5 million, while year-over-year metrics remained impressive, with daily active addresses up 165.5% and new addresses surging 219.8%.
Stablecoins remained a bright spot, led by Ripples RLUSD, which jumped 49% quarter-on-quarter to a $65.9 million market cap, and managed to cement its place as the largest XRPL stablecoin. The ecosystem further expanded with new launches like Circles USDC, USDB, EURØP, and XSGD.
Meanwhile, NFTs made a strong comeback, as daily transactions surged almost 227%, owing to a tenfold rise in minting activity under the XLS-20 standard, which rose to nearly 13.5 million mints.