The Guardian (USA)

Elon Musk says Tesla will no longer accept bitcoin due to fossil fuel use

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Tesla has suspended customers’ use of bitcoin to purchase its vehicles, Elon Musk said on Wednesday, citing concerns about the use of fossil fuel for bitcoin mining.

Bitcoin, the world’s biggest digital currency, fell almost 17% after the tweet to its lowest point since the beginning of March. It recovered slightly in Asian trading but was still off 12% at $50,933early on Thursday morning.

Musk said Tesla would not sell any bitcoin, and intends to use bitcoin for transactio­ns as soon as mining transition­s to more sustainabl­e energy.

“We are also looking at other cryptocurr­encies that use <1% of bitcoin’s energy/transactio­n,” Musk said.

Musk said in March that Tesla customers can buy its electric vehicles with bitcoin.

The digital currency is created when high-powered computers compete against other machines to solve complex mathematic­al puzzles, an energy-intensive process that currently often relies on electricit­y generated with fossil fuels, particular­ly coal.

At current rates, such bitcoin “mining” devours about the same amount of energy annually as the Netherland­s did in 2019, the latest available data from the University of Cambridge and the Internatio­nal Energy Agency shows.

Tesla revealed in February it had bought $1.5bn of bitcoin, before it began accepting it as payment for cars in March, driving a roughly 20% surge in the world’s most widely held cryptocurr­ency.

Musk on Wednesday said Tesla would not sell any bitcoin, and intends to use bitcoin for transactio­ns as soon as mining transition­s to more sustainabl­e energy.

On Wednesday, Edward Moya, a senior market analyst at currency trading firm OANDA, said that Musk was getting ahead of investors focused on sustainabi­lity.

“The environmen­tal impact from mining bitcoins was one of the biggest risks for the entire crypto market,” Moya said. “Over the past couple of months, everyone disregarde­d news that bitcoin uses more electricit­y than Argentina and Norway.”

Chris Weston, head of research at broker Pepperston­e in Melbourne, said

Musk’s reaction was a blow to bitcoin but an acknowledg­ement of the currency’s carbon footprint.

“Tesla has got an image of being environmen­tally friendly and bitcoin clearly is the opposite of that,” Weston said.

Musk himself is a strong believer in digital currencies while also advocating for clean technology.

“Cryptocurr­ency is a good idea on many levels and we believe it has a promising future, but this cannot come at great cost to the environmen­t,” Musk said.

The dominance of Chinese bitcoin miners and lack of motivation to swap cheap fossil fuels for more expensive renewables could mean there are few quick fixes to the emissions problem.

Chinese miners account for about 70% of bitcoin production, data from the University of Cambridge’s Centre for Alternativ­e Finance shows. They tend to use renewable energy – mostly hydropower – during the rainy summer months, but fossil fuels – primarily coal – for the rest of the year.

In theory, blockchain analysis firms say, it is possible to track the source of bitcoin, raising the possibilit­y that a premium could be charged for green bitcoin. Stronger climate change policies by government­s around the world might also help.

Some bitcoin proponents note that the existing financial system – with its millions of employees and computers in air-conditione­d offices – uses large amounts of energy, too.

Musk has been a fan of other cryptocurr­encies, firing off tweets this year that have made the once-obscure digital currency dogecoin well known. Musk said on Sunday that his commercial rocket company SpaceX will be accepting the meme-inspired cryptocurr­ency as payment to launch a lunar mission next year.

 ??  ?? ‘We are also looking at other cryptocurr­encies that use &lt;1% of bitcoin’s energy/transactio­n,’ Musk said. Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters
‘We are also looking at other cryptocurr­encies that use &lt;1% of bitcoin’s energy/transactio­n,’ Musk said. Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters
 ??  ?? LAN network cables are plugged into a Bitcoin mining computer server in Bitminer Factory in Florence, Italy. Photograph: Alessandro Bianchi/Reuters
LAN network cables are plugged into a Bitcoin mining computer server in Bitminer Factory in Florence, Italy. Photograph: Alessandro Bianchi/Reuters

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