Paris Blockchain Week 2026: Four Things the Main Stage Didn't Tell You
Author: Irish Tech News
April 20, 2026
Duration: 11:24
By Iaros Belkin who is the founder of Belkin Marketing and OG in the industry, attending crypto conferences since 2016. He attended Paris Blockchain Week 2026 as a delegate of Irish Tech News and reported from the conference floor.
Paris Blockchain Week wrapped at the Carrousel du Louvre on April 16 with more ministers, more banks, and more institutional logos than any previous edition. More than 10,000 attendees passed through.Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Deutsche Bank, and BlackRock were all in the room. The official narrative was orderly: Europe is maturing, institutions are arriving, MiCA is working.
Paris Blockchain Week
What the press releases didn't cover was more interesting.
MiCA 2.0 Is Already Being Planned, and Industry Will Write the Brief
The most-discussed topic on both the main stage and on the margins wasn't tokenization or AI or Bitcoin treasury strategy. It was MiCA 2.0.
Peter Kerstens, an adviser on technological innovation at the European Commission's financial services department, told the main stage audience that it would be "rather unusual" if there were not a MiCA 2 over time. He framed it not as a failure of the existing framework but as routine legislative evolution. MiCA already contains a mandatory review clause requiring the Commission to report by June 30, 2027, with authority to propose legislative changes.
What Kerstens said on stage was notable. What was said around it, in the side sessions and corridor conversations this reporter attended, was more specific. The Commission is planning a public consultation described internally as operating "without taboos." Industry participants are being explicitly invited to tell Brussels which rules should be expanded, which should be adjusted, and which should be left alone. The scope reportedly includes DeFi regulation, NFT classification, cross-border supervision consistency, and the ongoing question of whether ESMA should take oversight of major crypto firms away from national regulators.
The phrase heard repeatedly from C-level attendees and government officials alike was the same: "Web3 projects need to be part of writing this." That framing matters. MiCA 1.0 was written largely without deep practitioner input in the drafting phase. The Commission's public positioning at PBW 2026 suggests MiCA 2.0 will be different, or at least that policymakers want the industry to believe it will be.
The June 2027 review deadline gives the sector roughly fourteen months to influence the outcome. Firms operating in the EU that haven't engaged with the consultation process yet are already late.
France Has a Crypto Kidnapping Crisis So Severe the State Is Now Mobilising Elite Forces
The most striking moment of the conference didn't happen on a stage. It happened in a speech.
Jean-Didier Berger, minister delegate to France's interior minister, told attendees that his ministry is preparing a coordinated law enforcement response to what French authorities now describe as a physical security crisis. France has logged 41 crypto-linked kidnappings since January 2026. That is one attack every 2.5 days. The country accounts for roughly 40% of Europe's crypto-related ransom attacks and more than a quarter of all documented wrench attacks globally.
The context Berger was speaking into was immediate. Three days before the conference opened, GIGN commandos raided a hotel room in Val-de-Marne and freed a mother and her 11-year-old son who had been abducted from their home in Burgundy. Masked men had tied the father to a chair, beaten him, and demanded several hundred thousand euros in cryptocurrency. The father didn't pay. GIGN went in at 6am and arrested four suspects.
Berger confirmed that RAID and GIGN, France's two most elite intervention units, are now part of the coordinated response to crypto kidnapping cases. A prevention platform has already drawn thousands of registrations from digital asset holders seeking security guidance. A "more serious plan" involving tighter law enf...