The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Mining bitcoin uses more energy than Denmark — Study

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PARIS: 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.

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

Mining virtual currencies with a real-world 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 US$200 billion (175 billion euros), 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.

 ??  ?? The Ripple, Bitcoin, Etherum and Litecoin virtual currencies on a PC motherboar­d. — Reuters photo
The Ripple, Bitcoin, Etherum and Litecoin virtual currencies on a PC motherboar­d. — Reuters photo

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