The Guardian (USA)

Bitcoin rise could leave carbon footprint the size of London's

- Alex Hern

The surge in bitcoin’s price since the start of 2021 could result in the cryptocurr­ency having a carbon footprint the same as that of London, according to research.

Alex de Vries, a Dutch economist, created the Bitcoin Energy Consumptio­n Index, one of the first systematic attempts to estimate the energy use of the bitcoin network. By late 2017 he estimated the network used 30 terawatt hours (TWh) a year, the same as the whole of the Republic of Ireland.

Now De Vries estimates the network uses more than twice – and possibly three times – as much energy: between 78TWh and 101TWh, or about the same as Norway.

New bitcoins are created by “mining” coins, which is done by using computers to carry out complex calculatio­ns. The more bitcoins there are, the longer it takes to mine new coin, and the more electricit­y is used in the process.

Roughly 60% of the costs of bitcoin mining is the price of the electricit­y used, de Vries estimates. The more money miners get per bitcoin, the more they will be able to spend on mining it.

However, energy use often lags behind swings in currency due to the time it takes for bitcoin miners to acquire new hardware. De Vries writes that energy use is likely to increase substantia­lly in the short term as a result of the currency’s recent price rises, as new and establishe­d miners invest in more hardware.

By January this year the price of a bitcoin had reached $42,000. At this rate, miners would earn just over $15bn annually.

“With 60% of this income going to pay for electricit­y, at a price of $0.05 per kWh [kilowatt hour], the total network could consume up to 184TWh per year,” estimates De Vries.

That energy use is about the same as the 200TWh consumed by every datacentre for every other digital industry globally. The size of bitcoin’s electrical footprint means the carbon emissions are substantia­l.

The paper cites an assumption of 480-500g of carbon dioxide produced for every kWh consumed. “A total energy consumptio­n of 184TWh would result in a carbon footprint of 90.2m metric tons of CO2,” De Vries writes in the journal Joule, “which is roughly comparable to the carbon emissions produced by the metropolit­an area of London.”

As well as the carbon emissions of the bitcoin network, which have been widely debated as a result of the recent surge in interest, De Vries highlights other impacts of the protocol’s growth.

As well as consuming electricit­y, for instance, bitcoin miners need access to powerful computers, preferably including specialist chips created for mining. To produce 1m such computers, the largest provider, Bitmain, would have to use a month’s capacity of one of only two chip fabricator­s in the world capable of producing such highpower silicon – potentiall­y crowding out demand from other sectors such as AI, transporta­tion and home electronic­s.

In order to limit the growing footprint of the sector, De Vries suggests policymake­rs could follow the lead of regions that have put pressure on bitcoin miners, such as Québec in Canada, where a moratorium on new mining operations has been imposed, or Iran, which decided to confiscate mining equipment as the country suffered from outages blamed on cryptocurr­ency mining.

“Although bitcoin might be a decentrali­sed currency, many aspects of the ecosystem surroundin­g it are not,” he writes. “Large-scale miners can easily be targeted with higher electricit­y rates, moratoria or, in the most extreme case, confiscati­on of the equipment used.

“Moreover, the supply chain of specialise­d bitcoin mining devices is concentrat­ed among only a handful of companies. Manufactur­ers like Bitmain can be burdened with additional taxes like tobacco companies or be limited in their access to chip production.”

 ?? Photograph: Maxim Shemetov/Reuters ?? A bitcoin data mining centre in Bratsk, Russia. Energy use is directly related to the value of the cryptocurr­ency.
Photograph: Maxim Shemetov/Reuters A bitcoin data mining centre in Bratsk, Russia. Energy use is directly related to the value of the cryptocurr­ency.

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