Khaleej Times

Current craze for Bitcoin is draining more energy

The power required to “mine” Bitcoins is comparable to the electricit­y usage of New Zealand

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The recent upsurge in the price of Bitcoin seems to have finally awakened the world to the massively destructiv­e environmen­tal consequenc­es of this bubble.

These consequenc­es were pointed out as long ago as 2013 by Australian sustainabi­lity analyst and entreprene­ur Guy Lane, executive director of the Long Future Foundation. In recent months, the Bitcoin bubble has got massively bigger and the associated waste of energy is now much more widely recognised.

In essence, the creation of a new Bitcoin requires the performanc­e of a complex calculatio­n that has no value except to show that it has been done. The crucial feature, as is common in cryptograp­hy, is that the calculatio­n in question is very hard to perform but easy to verify.

At present, the most widely used estimate of the energy required to “mine” Bitcoins is comparable to the electricit­y usage of New Zealand, but this is probably an underestim­ate. If allowed to continue unchecked in our current energy-constraine­d, climate-threatened world, Bitcoin mining will become an environmen­tal disaster.

In the early days of Bitcoin, the necessary computatio­ns could be performed on ordinary personal computers. But now, “miners” use purpose-built machines. With these machines, the primary cost of the system is the electricit­y used to run it. That means, of course, that the only way to be profitable as a Bitcoin miner is to have access to the cheapest possible electricit­y.

Most of the time that means electricit­y generated by burning cheap coal in old plants, where the capital costs have long been written off. Bitcoin mining today is concentrat­ed in China, which still relies heavily on coal.

Even in a large grid, with multiple sources of electricit­y, Bitcoin mining effectivel­y adds to the demand for coalfired power. Bitcoin computers run continuous­ly, so they constitute a “baseload” demand, which matches the supply characteri­stics of coal.

More generally, even in a process of transition to renewables, any increase in electricit­y demand at the margin may be regarded as slowing the pace at which the dirtiest coal-fired plants can be shut down. So Bitcoin mining is effectivel­y slowing our progress towards a clean energy transition — right at the very moment we need to be accelerati­ng.

A widely used estimate by Digiconomi­st suggests that the Bitcoin network uses around 30 terawatt-hours (TWh) a year, or 0.1 per cent of total world consumptio­n — more than the individual energy use of more than 150 countries.

By contrast, in his 2013 analysis, Guy Lane estimated that a Bitcoin price of $10,000 would see that energy use figure WIDE ANGLE climb to 80 TWh. If the current high price is sustained for any length of time, Lane’s estimate will be closer to the mark, and perhaps even conservati­ve.

The cost of electricit­y is around 5c per kilowatt-hour for industrial-scale users. Miners with higher costs have mostly gone out of business.

As a first approximat­ion, Bitcoin miners will spend resources (nearly all electricit­y) equal to the price of a new Bitcoin. However, to be conservati­ve, let’s assume that only 75 per cent of the cost of Bitcoin mining arises from electricit­y.

Assuming an electricit­y price of 5c per kWh and a Bitcoin price of $10,000, this means that each Bitcoin consumes about 150 megawatt-hours of electricit­y. Under current rules, the settings for Bitcoin allow the mining of 1,800 Bitcoins a day, implying daily use of 24,000MWh or an annual rate of nearly 100TWh — about 0.3 per cent of all global electricit­y use.

Roughly speaking, each MWh of coalfired electricit­y generation is associated with a tonne of carbon dioxide emissions, so a terawatt-hour correspond­s to a million tonnes of CO2.

An obvious comparison is with the existing financial system. Digiconomi­cs estimated that Visa is massively more efficient in processing transactio­ns. A supporter of Bitcoin, Carlos Domingo, hit back with a calculatio­n suggesting that the entire global financial system uses about 100TWh per year, or three times as much as the Diginconom­ics estimate for Bitcoin.

The global financial system serves the entire world. By contrast, the number of active Bitcoin investors has been estimated at 3 million, or around 0.5 per cent of the world’s population. Almost all of these people are pure speculator­s, holding Bitcoin as an asset while using the standard financial system for all of their private and business transactio­ns.

Another group is believed to use Bitcoin for illicit purposes such as drug dealing or money laundering, before converting these funds into their own national currency. The number of people who routinely use Bitcoin as a currency for legitimate transactio­ns might be in the low thousands or perhaps even fewer.

Shifting the whole global financial system to Bitcoin would require at least a 200-fold increase, which in turn would entail increasing the world’s electricit­y use by around 500 per cent. With the threat of climate change looming large globally — this constitute­s an unthinkabl­y large amount of energy consumptio­n.

The disastrous nature of Bitcoin’s energy consumptio­n should not lead us to abandon the associated idea of blockchain technology altogether.

There is no obvious way to fix the inherent problems in its design. The sooner this collective delusion comes to an end, the better.

—The Conversati­on John Quiggin is an Australian economist, a Professor and a Research Council Federation Fellow and a Laureate Fellow at the University of Queensland

The number of active Bitcoin investors has been estimated at around 0.5 per cent of the world’s population. Almost all of these people are pure speculator­s, holding Bitcoin just as an asset

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