The Independent

Bitcoin’s carbon footprint could crush its potential

- OLI SHARPE AND PATRICK SCHRÖDER

The global cryptocurr­ency market has been riding high of late and topped $2 trillion (£1.4 trillion) in April 2021 for the first time. But one of its best known advocates, tech entreprene­ur Elon Musk, pulled the brakes on its rise when he announced this week that Tesla would be suspending customers’ use of bitcoin to purchase its electric vehicles. The decision (made via Twitter) wiped an estimated $365bn (£259bn) off the market.

Cryptocurr­encies such as bitcoin are digital or virtual currencies – using decentrali­sed networks based on blockchain technology – are currently receiving renewed attention as a possible counter to the risk of postpandem­ic inflation. At the same time, the debate has resurfaced about its fast-growing energy consumptio­n,

carbon emissions and environmen­tal impact.

While bitcoin’s advocates have long downplayed the growing carbon footprint, it has become harder to ignore. The “proof-of-work” mining – computers solving complicate­d mathematic­al problems – created to make transactio­ns secure is an essential process requiring large amounts of energy, creating a fast-growing emissions impact already rivalling that of small countries. By design, the computatio­n effort required for mining becomes larger as computers get faster and more people compete for the rewards of the mining. This creates an expectatio­n bitcoin’s energy consumptio­n will continue to increase especially if bitcoin transactio­n fees and hashrates (their total combined computatio­nal power) continue to increase as predicted.

In addition to its growing demand for energy and processing power, bitcoin mining requires special hardware rigs. These rigs contain specialise­d processors with material and metal requiremen­ts. When they come to the end of their lives they create a mountain of waste, electronic waste has become the world’s fastest-growing waste stream.

As bitcoin deliberate­ly has no central governance, any local bans on mining will push the work elsewhere

Most bitcoin mining is taking place in China, home to four of the five largest bitcoin mining pools – including F2Pool/DiscusFish, Poolin, Huobi Pool, and AntPool. Mining pools control around 75 per cent of the bitcoin network’s collective hashrate.

Being located in China enables the pools to take advantage of extremely cheap electricit­y prices, and bitcoin miners tend to operate in areas where excess electricit­y is available, such as the wind power base in Xinjiang or cheap coal-fired power, obviously bad for bitcoin’s carbon footprint.

Policymake­rs and legislator­s are becoming more aware of this problem. The New York State Senate has sought to halt bitcoin mining for three years until its climate impact is assessed. But as bitcoin deliberate­ly has no central governance, any local bans on mining will simply push the work elsewhere.

There have been arguments, including until very recently from people like Jack Dorsey and Elon Musk, that bitcoin can use surplus energy from renewables and thereby incentivis­e renewable energy developmen­t and distributi­on, but this thinking is flawed. There is actually a lot of demand for this otherwise unused energy, for the generation of green hydrogen or recharging of the growing electric vehicle fleets, and smarter grids make it easier to avoid allowing any generated energy going to waste.

There is also an inherent risk to bitcoin itself. With so much mining power centralise­d in a single jurisdicti­on, this exposes the global network and its users to a large degree of political risk – which is ironic as bitcoin was designed explicitly as a decentrali­sed digital currency with no one group or jurisdicti­on in control.

The Chinese Central Bank identified bitcoin as a financial risk and started putting pressure on local government­s to encourage bitcoin miners to quit. Furthermor­e, in October 2020 the People’s Bank of China published a bill to pave the way for the digital yuan while at the same time putting in place a ban on crypto issuance and trading for other coins.

New climate targets from China’s 14th Five Year Plan aim to create stronger controls over coal-fired power and high energy-consuming industries, which could impact bitcoin’s mining through carbon taxes or site regulation­s to such a large extent that it would likely destabilis­e the entire global bitcoin network.

Bitcoin is increasing­ly at odds with the pressure to deliver sustainabl­e, green economies. Not only will this give government­s reasons to shut down bitcoin mining but ethical consumers and investors are likely to shy away from using or investing in such a wasteful technology and it was arguably such pressure that led Elon Musk’s Tesla to step back from accepting bitcoin.

Other cryptocurr­encies such as Ether, which uses Ethereum as its blockchain, are explicitly planning to move away from proof-of-work to alternativ­e validation approaches such as proof-of-stake, while any new cryptocurr­encies are likely to emerge with climate concerns and efficiency at scale built into them from the start.

Although it goes against the rather anarchist origins of cryptocurr­encies, institutio­ns such as Wall Street are beginning to explore central bank digital currencies, and these could be more consumer-friendly and safer investment­s because of explicit government backing.

There is no doubt that cryptocurr­encies and blockchain­s in one form or another are here to stay, even if bitcoin and proof-of-work are not sustainabl­e. But internatio­nal cooperatio­n around digital currencies and a coordinate­d policy response will become increasing­ly important, challengin­g the notion that digital currencies should be free from explicit governance and government regulation.

Dr Oli Sharpe is an independen­t researcher in artificial intelligen­ce, University of Sussex, and a host on the YouTube channel Go Meta

Patrick Schröder is a senior research fellow on the Energy, Environmen­t and Resources programme at Chatham House

 ?? (Getty) ?? The cryptocurr­ency was designed with no one group or jurisdicti­on in control
(Getty) The cryptocurr­ency was designed with no one group or jurisdicti­on in control

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