Global Times

Mining Bitcoin uses more energy: study

▶ Unknown number of server farms in the world trying to unearth them

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Extracting a dollar’s worth of cryptocurr­ency such as Bitcoin from the deep Web consumes three times more energy than digging up a dollar’s worth of gold, researcher­s said Monday.

There are now hundreds of virtual currencies and an unknown number of server farms around the world running around the clock to unearth them, according to a recent report from the University of Cambridge.

Mining virtual currencies with a realworld value, in other words, carries a hidden environmen­tal cost that is rarely measured or taken into account.

“We now have an entirely new industry that is consuming more energy per year than many countries,” said Max Krause, a researcher at the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education and lead author of a study in the journal Nature Sustainabi­lity.

“In 2018, Bitcoin is on track to consume more energy than Denmark,” he told AFP.

Denmark consumed 31.4 billion kilowatt hours in electricit­y in 2015. As of July 1 of this year, Bitcoin mining used up approximat­ely 30.1 billion kilowatt hours, according to the study.

The highly competitiv­e practice of mining cryptocurr­encies requires hundreds, even tens of thousands, of linked computers running intensive calculatio­ns in search of the internet equivalent of precious metals.

New coins are awarded to those who complete calculatio­ns first, with the transactio­n confirmed and entered into the currency’s shared public ledger, known as the “blockchain.”

The top 100 cryptocurr­encies have a current market value of about $200 billion, according to the website coinmarket­cap.com.

Bitcoin accounts for more than half of that amount.

“We wanted to spread awareness about the potential environmen­tal costs for mining cryptocurr­encies,” Krause said. “Just because you are creating a digital product, that doesn’t mean it does not consume a large amount of energy to make it.”

The movies, music and videos that billions of people stream every day all have measurable environmen­tal costs, earlier research has shown.

For the study, Krause and Thabet Tolaymat, an environmen­tal engineer based in Cincinnati, Ohio, calculated the average energy consumed to create one US dollar’s worth of four top virtual currencies – Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin and Monero – over the 30-month period up to June 2018.

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