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Flooded Coal Mine Highlights Chinese BTC Miners’ Reliance on Dirty Power

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Flooded Coal Mine Highlights Chinese BTC Miners’ Reliance on Dirty Power

A coal mine located in China’s Xinjiang region flooded and shut down last weekend. The resulting effect on China’s BTC mining industry has highlighted how the practice is still heavily reliant on coal. 

The mine’s shutdown coincided with a significant drop in BTC’s hash rate—the measuring unit of the BTC network’s processing power. In fact, the BTC hash rate dropped to its lowest level since November 2020 during the mine blackout, per Coin Metrics figures. 

Coin Metrics
Coin Metrics data. Image: Coin Metrics

These figures highlight the BTC network’s reliance on fossil fuels, rather than renewable energy. 

BTC’s dirty energy problem

BTC mining is an energy-intensive business, and despite some efforts to pivot towards renewable energy, the network is still heavily reliant on fossil fuels, particularly in China. 

“China’s current obsession with coal plants—despite greenhouse emission promises—means that certain miners can take advantage of cheap “dirty” power in some regions,” Jason Deane, BTC analyst at Quantum Economics, told Decrypt. He added that, “It is a commercial, rather than [an] environmental decision. 

The Hard Truth About BTC’s Energy Consumption

A study published by Cambridge University estimates that only 39% of the power used to mine BTC currently comes from renewable sources. Using this figure, BTC’s carbon footprint is broadly equivalent to approximately 61 billion pounds of burned coal, the average electricity consumption of nine million homes, or 138 billion miles driven by an average passenger vehicle. 

China—like many other countries—has committed to certain goals in order to protect the environment and reverse climate change. In particular, the country has committed to going carbon neutral by 2060

Report: Chinese BTC Mining To Reach 130 Million Metric Tons By 2024

There are many tasks ahead before China can make good on its promise, but one of these involves making BTC’s energy consumption greener than it currently is. The scientific journal Nature recently published a study revealing that if left unchecked, China’s BTC mining industry could generate as much as 130.5 million metric tons of carbon emissions by 2024. 

Yet Deane suggests that over time, BTC’s environmental impact will decline as mining becomes more globally distributed. “BTC is a global network, and as more and more large-scale players are joining that network in many different geographical locations, the world’s reliance on both China’s hash rate and, in particular, that region’s infamous “dirty energy” will decline,” he said.

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All content in this article is for informational purposes only and in no way serves as investment advice. Investing in cryptocurrencies, commodities and stocks is very risky and can lead to capital losses.

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