The National - News

Malaysia destroys 1,069 Bitcoin mining machines after energy theft by owners

- DEEPTHI NAIR

Authoritie­s in Malaysia arrested the owners of a cryptocurr­ency mining farm for stealing energy, shut down the unit and steamrolle­red 1,069 of its mining machines worth 5.3 million Malaysian ringgit ($1.25m), reports said.

The raid was a joint operation carried out by the police and Sarawak Energy Berhad in the Malaysian city of Miri, according to local newspaper The Star. The operation took place between February and April and those arrested were charged with stealing energy.

The arrests follow a crackdown against Bitcoin miners in China last month, when authoritie­s, concerned about the environmen­tal impact of mining, closed down operations in Sichuan province.

Electricit­y is a primary input in the mining of Bitcoin and other cryptocurr­encies. The coins are mined by computers that process complex algorithms in halls that span the area of several football pitches.

In April, researcher­s at Cambridge University estimated that the electricit­y consumptio­n of the Bitcoin network is almost 120 terawatt-hours per year. That is more than the UAE’s energy consumptio­n at 119.45 terawatt-hours, and on course to overtake Pakistan.

“A total of six people have been successful­ly charged under section 379 of the penal code for electricit­y theft and have been fined up to 8,000 Malaysian ringgits [$1,896] and jailed for up to eight months,” Miri police chief Hakemal Hawari said.

“The electricit­y theft for mining Bitcoin activities has caused frequent power outages and in 2021, three houses were razed due to illegal electricit­y supply connection­s.”

The SEB said it lost 8.4m ringgit ($1.98m) worth of electricit­y because of Bitcoin mining operations. Local news outlet Dayak Daily released a video of the police steamrolle­ring the mining rigs in Miri.

In May, UK police officers forced their way into an enormous Bitcoin mine at the Great Bridge Industrial Estate in Sandwell, near Birmingham, where they found a large bank of about 100 computers used for mining.

“My understand­ing is that mining for cryptocurr­ency is not itself illegal but clearly abstractin­g electricit­y from the mains supply to power it is,” said Sergeant Jennifer Griffin of Sandwell Police.

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