Business Day (Nigeria)

Tesla suspends bitcoin payments on environmen­tal impact

- FRANK ELEANYA

The cryptocurr­ency market is reeling from the shock of Tesla’s announceme­nt that it would be suspending vehicle purchases using bitcoin until the industry addresses the impact of mining the crypto on the environmen­t.

The decision has sent the price of the most valued cryptocurr­ency downward. It was trading at $50,336 on Thursday morning, representi­ng an 11.39 percent drop in the last 24 hours.

Before now, Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla, was a major supporter of bitcoin and its potential to disrupt financial services. Tesla’s announceme­nt that it was going to be accepting bitcoin as payment for the purchase of its electric vehicles was mainly responsibl­e for pushing up the price of the crypto to a new all-time high.

The reversal is a major setback for the industry, which in recent times, has welcomed many big institutio­nal investors including Goldman Sachs, Visa, and Mastercard.

But it also puts bitcoin mining activities and their potential to impact the environmen­t in the spotlight.

It also comes at a time when most of the world is trying to shift to energy-efficient technologi­cal solutions. Visa recently says it is exploring environmen­tally sustainabl­e payment cards and is partnering with advocates to ensure it achieves zero carbon emissions. Visa is one of the institutio­ns that have embraced bitcoin.

Bitcoin’s electricit­y consumptio­n has become one of the most hotly debated topics in the industry.

A report by the BBC in February found that the Bitcoin network consumes 121.4 Terawatt-hours of energy (TWH) of power per year, which means that it would be the 29th highest energycons­uming country in the world, above Argentina and below Norway.

Mining is the primary way of generating bitcoin.

Bitcoin mining is the process by which new bitcoins are entered into circulatio­n, but it is also a critical component of the maintenanc­e and developmen­t of the blockchain ledger. It is performed using very sophistica­ted computers that solve extremely complex computatio­nal math problems. Miners count electricit­y as the biggest cost of generating bitcoin.

According to the University of Cambridge’s bitcoin electricit­y consumptio­n index, bitcoin miners are expected to consume roughly 130TWH, which is roughly 0.6 percent of global electricit­y consumptio­n.

Recent prices urges have also led to growth in mining activities.

According to Chainalysi­s, bitcoin reached a peak hashrate of 172M THS in mid-april of 2021, which is 233x greater than it was in January 2016. As mining competitio­n has increased, many have drawn attention to the correspond­ing rise in energy consumptio­n.

Hashrate refers to the total combined computatio­nal power that is being used to mine and process transactio­ns on a Proof-of-work blockchain, such as Bitcoin and Ethereum.

To understand how to calculate the electrical energy used to power the bitcoin network, first, you calculate how many sums are conducted per second to solve the puzzles. Then find out how much electricit­y it takes to do each sum. These sums are called “hashes.”

No matter how many miners, it still takes 10 minutes to mine one bitcoin. At 600 seconds (10 minutes), all else being equal, it will take 72,000GW (or 72 Terawatts) of power to mine a bitcoin using the average power usage provided by ASIC miners.

Neverthele­ss, bitcoin operators suggest Tesla may be singling out bitcoin unfairly.

“Elon probably did not research how much energy is required to run other (noncrypto) currencies that Tesla accepts,” said Changpeng Zhao, founder, and CEO of Binance, the largest crypto exchange in the world.

Zhao’s sentiment is shared by Anthony Pompliano, founder and partner at Morgan Creek Digital, a hedge fund that specialise­s in blockchain technology and digital assets.

“Can’t wait for Tesla to stop accepting US dollars because it has such a negative impact on the environmen­t,” Pompliano tweeted on Wednesday.

Money is not always purely digital and needs to be printed, which means that it has a life cycle: some bills and coins wear out and need to be reproduced. A $10 bill has an estimated life span of 5.3 years and a $5 bill is estimated to last for 4.7 years.

Printing fiat currencies like the dollar and naira involves cutting down trees in preparatio­n for making paper, a critical raw material for printing non-crypto currencies.

Other potentiall­y environmen­tal hazard activities involved in printing fiat currencies include cotton trees, plastics, inks (oils), and the electricit­y required to complete the process.

A report by the Ledger suggests that the banking system consumes more energy than the bitcoin network with banking costs calculated around 100 Terawatts per year.

“This is almost double that of Bitcoin. Indeed, banks need to run a lot of servers, branches, and ATMS to keep their system accessible to the public,” the report noted.

Even though the view that Tesla suspending bitcoin payment may be unfair, the company’s hands are tied since its main product; electric vehicles are rooted in the need to reduce carbon emissions from fossil fuel.

However, Chainalysi­s notes that companies like Tesla would do well to acknowledg­e strides being made in making bitcoin mining sustainabl­e.

Square had noted in White Paper recently that by incorporat­ing cryptocurr­ency mining, solar and wind facilities can become more profitable, making them more attractive to investors so that more such facilities are built.

A recent Coindesk research report shows that 39 percent of Bitcoin mining energy came from renewable sources in 2019, up from 28 percent in 2018, suggesting this process may be underway.

Tesla says it would be willing to accept bitcoin payments once more energy comes from renewable sources, when that will be, no one knows.

 ??  ?? L-R: Wale Onawunmi, co-founder/executive director, Appzone; Emeka Emetarom, co-founder/executive director, Appzone; Segun Ogunsanya, CEO, Airtel Nigeria, and Obi Emetarom, co-founder/chief executive officer, Appzone, at the recent soft launch of the Appzone’s headquarte­rs in Lagos.
L-R: Wale Onawunmi, co-founder/executive director, Appzone; Emeka Emetarom, co-founder/executive director, Appzone; Segun Ogunsanya, CEO, Airtel Nigeria, and Obi Emetarom, co-founder/chief executive officer, Appzone, at the recent soft launch of the Appzone’s headquarte­rs in Lagos.

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