China Daily

Crypto miners rile green advocates over power use

- By LIU YINMENG in Los Angeles teresaliu@chinadaily­usa.com

The extensive energy use by cryptocurr­ency companies has drawn the ire of some US lawmakers and prompted the concerns of experts, who warn that their operations threaten to erase years of work dedicated to curtailing climate change.

“I worry that if it grows too fast that it might put a strain on the electricit­y grid and increase carbon emissions,” Joshua Rhodes, a research associate at the University of Texas at Austin who studies smart grid and bulk electricit­y systems, told China Daily.

Jacob Elkin, a climate law fellow at Columbia University’s Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, said cryptocurr­ency mining significan­tly drives up new energy demands, which has resulted in increased fossil fuel production.

“As a result, crypto mining generates substantia­l greenhouse gas emissions that run counter to the emission reductions needed to combat climate change. The environmen­tal impacts of crypto mining also include substantia­l water consumptio­n,” he told China Daily.

Elkin said state government­s could halt new cryptocurr­ency mining projects powered by fossil fuel plants to allow themselves time to study the impact of crypto mining, pointing to a recent bill passed by the New York State legislatur­e which does that. The bill is awaiting the signature of Governor Kathy Hochul to become law.

Lucrative business

The cryptocurr­ency industry is a lucrative business. Its current global market capitaliza­tion is $1.10 trillion, according to CoinMarket­Cap which tracks coin stats. It is about the equivalent of the gross domestic product of Italy.

Crypto mining is the process of creating new coins by solving puzzles. Crypto enthusiast­s, or miners, compete with each other to solve complex math problems. Whoever deciphers the puzzle first gets the coins as a reward.

As bitcoin’s popularity surged, puzzles become increasing­ly difficult to solve and mining turned into an energy-intensive process that involves a room full of specialize­d machines.

An index from the University of Cambridge projected that the annual electricit­y consumptio­n of bitcoin, one of the world’s biggest cryptocurr­encies, to be roughly 130 terawattho­urs in June, more than three times higher than at the beginning of 2019, researcher­s said.

Bitcoin’s carbon footprint exceeds the total greenhouse gas emission reductions of electrical vehicles, according to a research paper on One Earth.

However, Anthony Borquez, assistant professor of clinical entreprene­urship at the University of Southern California’s Marshall School of Business, told China Daily that crypto mining secures the energy grid and allows for renewable energy generation to be built due to the constant demand from mining as well as the ability to cut power at a moment’s notice.

In a letter to US President Joe Biden’s administra­tion on July 15, a group of Democratic lawmakers urged the government to limit the environmen­tal impact of coin mining and to impose stricter energy usage reporting requiremen­ts on crypto companies.

The letter noted that the share of global mining activities in the United States has increased from 4 percent in August 2019 to almost 38 percent in January 2022 after the Chinese government banned crypto transactio­ns and mining last year.

Now, over a third of global computing power for bitcoin mining is drawn from the US, stated the letter.

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