AMBCrypto Weekly

Bitcoin hashpower: The need to move out of China

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China is seen as a dominant force when it comes to Bitcoin mining and the concentrat­ion of hash power. Cheap electricit­y has aided this East Asian country in hosting the majority of mining activities. A recent CoinShares report on Bitcoin mining revealed that China controlled 65% of the cryptocurr­ency network’s processing power.

Barry Silbert, the Founder, and CEO of Grayscale had earlier spoken about China’s dominance in a call hosted by Grayscale Investment­s. He said,

“China has dominated the Bitcoin mining space from the mining pool and equipment manufactur­ing perspectiv­e. Over 50% of Bitcoin mining through these Chinese pools. This dominant position that China has had is not new and people have been talking about it for years. And, Bitcoin investors do not seem overly concerned about it.

China is home to some of the big mining pools. According to data from BTC.com, the top mining pools are all from China. Poolin which dominates the chart with a hash rate share of 19%, F2Pool with 17.5%, BTC.com with 11.2% and AntPool with 10.6%, are all based in the country.

China also dominates the ASIC manufactur­ing game with players like Bitmain, MicroBT, and Canaan. According to Tokeninsig­ht’s report, the top four manufactur­ers in 2019 accounted for more than 95% of the total market share. Additional­ly, more than 60% of ASIC mining hardware manufactur­ers are distribute­d in the Asia-Pacific region, of which 73% are from China.

The Coronaviru­s outbreak, which has stalled the Chinese economy, has even affected mining farms. Recently, Jiang Zhuoer, the operator of mining pool BTC.Top, revealed on Weibo that his mining facility situated in a remote suburb was shut down by the local police.

While there is any significan­t decline in terms of the hash power controlled by the China-based mining pools, this could, however, open doors for other geographic­ally active regions for Bitcoin mining such as United States, Canada, Northern Europe, Russia, and Georgia.

The Grayscale exec noted a growing shift in the mining activity over the past couple of months towards North America specifical­ly in the US and Canada.

He stated,

“The Coronaviru­s outbreak has further highlighte­d some of the risks associated certainly on the equipment side of things. If this shift does happen, and we see the mining and the pools move from China into North America, it will absolutely help and prove investor perception, it will certainly help improve the US policymake­rs’ perception of the security and safety of the Bitcoin network.”

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