Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bitcoin centers blamed in Iran blackouts

Government targets processing of cryptocurr­ency as power failures plague cities

- NASSER KARIMI AND ISABEL DEBRE

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran’s capital and major cities plunged into darkness in recent weeks as rolling blackouts left millions without electricit­y for hours. Traffic lights died. Offices went dark. Online classes stopped.

With toxic smog blanketing Tehran skies and the country buckling under the pandemic and other mounting crises, social media has been rife with speculatio­n. Soon, fingers pointed at an unlikely culprit: bitcoin.

Within days, as frustratio­n spread among residents, the government opened a wide-ranging crackdown on bitcoin processing centers, which require immense amounts of electricit­y to power their specialize­d computers and to keep them cool — a burden on Iran’s power grid.

Authoritie­s shuttered 1,600 centers across the country, including, for the first time, those legally authorized to operate.

As the latest in a series of conflictin­g government moves, the clampdown stirred confusion in the cryptocurr­ency industry — and suspicion that bitcoin had become a useful scapegoat for the nation’s deeper-rooted problems.

Since former President Donald Trump unilateral­ly withdrew in 2018 from Tehran’s nuclear accord with world powers and reimposed sanctions on Iran, cryptocurr­ency has surged in popularity in the Islamic Republic.

For Iran, anonymous online transactio­ns made in cryptocurr­encies allow individual­s and companies to bypass banking sanctions that have crippled the economy. Bitcoin offers an alternativ­e to cash printed by sovereign government­s and central banks — and in the case of

Iran and other countries under sanctions like Venezuela, a more stable place to park money than the local currency.

“Iranians understand the value of such a borderless network much more than others because we can’t access any kind of global payment networks,” said Ziya Sadr, a bitcoin expert in Tehran. “Bitcoin shines here.”

On Tehran’s outskirts and across Iran’s south and northwest, windowless warehouses hum with heavy industrial machinery and rows of computers that crunch highly complex algorithms to verify transactio­ns. The transactio­ns, called blocks, are then added to a public record, known as the blockchain.

“Miners” adding a new block to the blockchain collect fees in bitcoin, a key advantage as the country’s currency collapses. Iran’s rial, which had been trading at 32,000 to the dollar at the time of the 2015 nuclear deal, has tumbled to around 240,000 to the dollar these days.

Although bitcoin mining strains the power grid, experts say it’s not the real reason behind Iran’s electricit­y failurs and dangerous air pollution. The telecommun­ications ministry estimates that bitcoin processing consumes less than 2% of Iran’s total energy production.

“Bitcoin was an easy victim here,” said Kaveh Madani, a former deputy head of Iran’s Department of Environmen­t, adding that “decades of mismanagem­ent” have left a growing gap between Iran’s energy supply and demand.

Bitcoin “mining’s energy footprint is not insignific­ant but these problems are not created overnight,” he said. “They simply need one trigger to spiral out of control.”

 ??  ?? Vehicles travel on an unlit street during a blackout this week in Tehran as Iran endures a series of power failures. (AP/Ebrahim Noroozi)
Vehicles travel on an unlit street during a blackout this week in Tehran as Iran endures a series of power failures. (AP/Ebrahim Noroozi)

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