The Guardian Australia

Value of cryptocurr­ency bitcoin climbs 5% to record high of $63,000

- Joanna Partridge

The value of the cryptocurr­ency bitcoin has surged to a record high, reaching $63,000 (£45,800).

The cryptocurr­ency, which has risen in value by 450% in the last six months, continued to climb by a further 5% during trading on Tuesday.

Bitcoin’s price has more than doubled since the start of 2021. The digital currency has been on a rollercoas­ter ride in the last year, and was trading at about only $7,000 in April 2020.

The smaller, rival cryptocurr­ency Ethereum also rose on Tuesday, reaching its own record high of $2,205.

The fresh records were set a day before the launch of the US’s largest cryptocurr­ency exchange, Coinbase, on Wall Street’s tech-heavy Nasdaq stock exchange.

Coinbase’s listing has been viewed by cryptocurr­ency fans as another sign of its growing mainstream acceptance among investors and financial institutio­ns, and as a means of payment.

The price of bitcoin soared towards $60,000 in February amid news of highprofil­e purchases of the digital currency, including by the electric car company Tesla, run by the billionair­e Elon

Musk. Tesla announced at the time it had bought $1.5bn in bitcoin and said it might soon accept payments in the currency.

Musk, who briefly became the world’s richest man before a slump in the Tesla share price, has previously changed his Twitter biography to “#bitcoin”.

Cryptocurr­ency trading is also enjoying a boom in Turkey, as investors seek refuge from the country’s economic turmoil and surging inflation.

However, cryptocurr­encies remain controvers­ial, and global regulators including the Bank of England are sceptical, on account of their volatility and vulnerabil­ity to theft or hacking.

Bitcoin and other digital currencies have also come under increasing fire for their environmen­tal impact, given the huge amount of energy required to create them.

New bitcoins are created by “mining” coins, a process that requires 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.

The energy usage attributab­le to bitcoin alone is equivalent to the annual carbon footprint of Argentina, according to the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricit­y Consumptio­n Index, a measuring tool made by researcher­s at Cambridge University.

 ?? Photograph: Chesnot/Getty Images ?? Bitcoin’s value has risen ahead of the launch of the Coinbase exchange on Nasdaq.
Photograph: Chesnot/Getty Images Bitcoin’s value has risen ahead of the launch of the Coinbase exchange on Nasdaq.

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