The Guardian (USA)

Cryptocurr­ency ethereum plans to cut carbon emissions by 99% with upgrade

- Alex Hern UK technology editor

Ethereum, the second largest cryptocurr­ency, will complete a plan to lower its carbon emissions by more than 99% in the next month, the foundation that controls the platform has confirmed.

The project, called “the merge”, will result in ethereum switching the underlying technology it uses for validating crypto transactio­ns to a new process that requires less energy to manage.

Once complete, the merge will end the role of “miners” in the ethereum ecosystem, helping to dramatical­ly reduce electricit­y usage. These users run huge quantities of powerful, purpose-built technology all day, every day, to generate random numbers that affect the security of the overall network.

The energy consumptio­n of ethereum mining is currently estimated at about 72 terawatt-hours a year, according to Alex de Vries, a Dutch economist who runs the Digiconomi­st website. That is comparable with the power consumptio­n of Colombia, with a carbon footprint equivalent to that of Switzerlan­d.

The changeover will lead to the platform moving away from a “proof of work” process, which requires cryptocurr­ency miners to generate random numbers to verify records stored on the blockchain – the technology underpinni­ng digital currencies such as ethereum and the more popular bitcoin.

Ethereum will instead use a “proof of stake” process, in which the network will be secured by users who “stake” sums of the cryptocurr­ency, committing themselves to acting honestly at the risk of losing it.

De Vries said the switchover would eliminate the majority of electricit­y usage. “They could cut off a huge chunk of their power demand. I will be working on quantifyin­g that more accurately but at least 99% (probably even 99.9%) reduction should be achievable. This translates to something like the electricit­y consumptio­n of a country like Portugal (a quarter of all data centres in the world combined) vanishing overnight.”

The proof-of-stake model is currently being used on an experiment­al “beacon” blockchain, where it has been tested to ensure that the theoretica­l security it provides is sufficient for the multibilli­on-dollar economy that sits on top of the ethereum network. Now the experiment­al blockchain will take over the work of the main network.

“Imagine ethereum is a spaceship that isn’t quite ready for an interstell­ar voyage,” the ethereum foundation said, explaining the merge. “With the beacon chain, the community has built a new engine and a hardened hull. After significan­t testing, it’s almost time to hot-swap the new engine for the old midflight. This will merge the new, more efficient engine into the existing ship, ready to put in some serious lightyears and take on the universe.”

There are still potential problems ahead. The foundation said users needed to watch out for an increase in scam activity because hackers could take advantage of the confusion around the switchover to try to trick users into giving up their passwords, their funds or both. “You should be on high alert for scams trying to take advantage of users during this transition,” the organisati­on said. “Do not send your ETH anywhere in an attempt to ‘upgrade to ETH2’. There is no ETH2 token, and there is nothing more you need to do for your funds to remain safe.”

The final stages of the merge are expected to begin on 6 September, the foundation said, with the old blockchain switched off at some point between 10 and 20 September.

Ethereum will not be the first network to use proof of stake, and others including cardano and solana have demonstrat­ed the technology at a smaller scale. But its switchover will leave bitcoin, the largest cryptocurr­ency, facing renewed criticism for its continued reliance on proof of work.

The bitcoin network uses 130TWh of electricit­y a year, De Vries estimates, a sum that will be increasing­ly difficult to defend if the ethereum blockchain demonstrat­es that the same capabiliti­es can be achieved in an environmen­tally friendly manner.

 ?? ?? The energy consumptio­n of ethereum mining is currently estimated at about 72 tera-watt hours a year. Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters
The energy consumptio­n of ethereum mining is currently estimated at about 72 tera-watt hours a year. Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters

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