The Guardian (USA)

Crypto crash unlikely to reduce its climate impact, expert says

- Alex Hern Technology editor

The crypto crash will not reduce the sector’s climate impact any time soon, an economist has warned, even though the environmen­tal footprint of digital currencies is in theory set by their market value.

“Unless bitcoin collapses further, there’s no reason to expect a decrease in environmen­tal impact,” said Alex de Vries, a data scientist at the Dutch central bank and the founder of Digiconomi­st, which tracks the sustainabi­lity of cryptocurr­ency projects.

His research shows that while the increase in a cryptocurr­ency’s price encourages more computer capacity to be dedicated to it – increasing carbon emissions – that capacity takes a long time to disappear after the value declines, so the climate impact persists.

Cryptocurr­encies work by validating their transactio­ns through huge numbers of “miners”, who use their computers to solve extremely complex maths problems in exchange for the chance of getting tokens as a reward, in a highly energy-intensive process.

De Vries estimates that the bitcoin network uses about 204 terrawatth­ours (TWh) of electricit­y per year, around the same as the energy consumptio­n of Thailand and above that of all but 23 sovereign nations.

Other cryptocurr­encies add to that footprint: ethereum, the token that underpins the NFT boom and the “decentrali­sed finance” sector, has an annualised footprint of around 104TWh (equivalent to Kazakhstan, more than all but 34 nations), while even dogecoin, a lightheart­ed spinoff of bitcoin famed for its community’s positive attitude, consumes an estimated 4TWh annually.

Those figures have barely changed over the past month despite $1tn being wiped off the crypto sector, and other measures of the amount of processing power devoted to “mining” similarly show little decline.

All major cryptocurr­encies use electrical power in rough proportion to the price of the token because that dictates how much the reward given to miners is worth. For bitcoin, for instance, the reward for successful mining is 6.25 bitcoin every 10 minutes – currently, about $210,000.

The higher the value of the reward, the more energy it is worth using to try to win it, ensuring that as the price of bitcoin rose from $8,000 in October 2019 to $60,000 two years later, the energy use of the sector rose too, from 73TWh to its current high.

But while an increase in the price of cryptocurr­ency quickly leads to an increase in the carbon emissions of the sector, a crash like the one seen in past month doesn’t do the reverse. “It likely stops the environmen­tal impact from going up any further,” said de Vries, “but a bitcoin price of $25,200 is sufficient to sustain an annual electricit­y consumptio­n of 184TWh.”

That’s because the cost of cryptocurr­ency mining is split over two main areas: buying the hardware, and paying for electricit­y. When prices are on the rise, miners buy new computers – expensive graphics cards for ethereum, or purpose-built “rigs” for bitcoin – but once they are already set up, it’s worth switching them off only when the cost of electricit­y alone is higher than the expected revenue.

In a paper published in the journal Joule last year, de Vries estimated that a massive crash in the price of bitcoin, back down to $8,000, would be required to meaningful­ly reduce the total emissions of mining – and even then, it could sustain an energy consumptio­n of up to 60TWh per year.

The continued turmoil in the cryptocurr­ency markets means the sector may have further to contract. On Wednesday morning, tether, a stablecoin that effectivel­y functions as a bank, paid out a further $1.5bn to depositors withdrawin­g their cash from its coffers. In the past week, the slowmotion bank run has seen $9bn of its reserves withdrawn, more than 10% of its total market cap and well over twice the cash-on-hand it declared it had at the beginning of the year.

Andreessen Horowitz, a prominent venture capital firm and one of the key financial backers of the cryptocurr­ency sector, said on Tuesday that we may be entering a “crypto winter”, echoing a warning from the Coinbase chief executive, Brian Armstrong, that valuations may be depressed for some time.

 ?? Photograph: Adirach Toumlamoon/Pacific Press/Rex ?? Digital coin mining hardware at Thailand Crypto Expo 2022 in Bangkok.
Photograph: Adirach Toumlamoon/Pacific Press/Rex Digital coin mining hardware at Thailand Crypto Expo 2022 in Bangkok.

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