New Era

US steps into China’s bitcoin breach

- - Nampa/AFP

ROCKDALE - The long sheds at North America’s largest bitcoin mine look endless in the Texas sun, packed with the type of machines that have helped the United States to become the new global hub for the digital currency.

The operation in the quiet town of Rockdale was part of an already bustling US business -- now boosted by Beijing’s intensifie­d crypto crackdown that has pushed the industry west.

Experts say rule of law and cheap electricit­y in the United States are a draw for bitcoin miners, whose energygulp­ing computers race to unlock units of the currency.

“There’s a lot of competitor­s coming into Texas because they are seeing the same thing (as) when we came here,” said Chad Everett Harris, CEO of miner Whinstone, which operates the Rockdale site owned by US company Riot Blockchain.

China was the undisputed heartland of crypto mining with about two-thirds of global capacity in September 2019, but last month Beijing declared illegal all transactio­ns involving crypto money as it seeks to launch one of its own.

Figures released on Wednesday by the University of Cambridge showed that activity in the United States more than doubled in the four months to the end of August, increasing the market share held by the world’s biggest economy to 35.4%.

Samir Tabar, chief strategy officer at miner Bit Digital, said the company started to pull out of China in 2020 and accelerate­d that process as the crackdown intensifie­d. They have operations in the United States and Canada.

“China’s bitcoin mining ban was basically an unintentio­nal gift to the US,” he said. “Thanks to their ban an entire sector migrated to North America -- along with innovation, labor and machines.”

Some of the key pulls toward the United States are simply a democratic government, a court system and the power to protect property rights.

“If you’re going to make long-term investment­s and accumulate wealth in a country, you want to have some confidence that it’s not going to be taken away by the government,” said David Yermack, a crypto expert at New York University.

He expected the shift to the United States to be temporary, saying places like Nordic countries have cheap and abundant renewable energy, as well as plenty of cold weather to cool the hot-running mining machines.

The steady increase in US-based mining operations has fanned the ongoing environmen­tal criticisms of the industry’s massive annual electricit­y consumptio­n -- more than what the Philippine­s uses in a year, according to Cambridge University data. An ongoing backlash has been fuelled by concerns the industry relies on carbon-emitting power sources that contribute to climate change.

“To think that we’re causing harm or pollution or all those things here... the majority of our power comes out of the ERCOT grid and that profile is extremely friendly to the environmen­t,” Harris said, referring to the Texas power network operator.

According to ERCOT’s data for 2020, about 46% of its power came from natural gas while wind and solar combined for 25 percent with coal at 18 percent.

The price miners pay for electricit­y is key, and a place like Texas is desirable because the market is deregulate­d so companies can have more flexible terms, said Viktoriya Zotova, a business school professor at Georgetown University.

“In principle, they can buy the electricit­y when it’s cheaper and not buy it when it’s more expensive,” she said.

While there are obvious reasons for the crypto world’s migration, some also see a bit of poetry in mining operations coming to the United States from China.

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