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Infosys Co-Founder Nilekani: 'Crypto Too Energy Intensive for Payments'

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Infosys Co-Founder Nilekani: 'Crypto Too Energy Intensive for Payments'

Indian tech billionaire Nandan Nilekani thinks cryptocurrencies are too energy-intensive and volatile for payments but they “should be encouraged as an asset to be bought and sold, like a commodity.”

“Just like you have some of your assets in gold or real estate, you can have some of your assets in crypto,” he told the Financial Times in an interview published today. “I think there’s a role for crypto as a stored value but certainly not in a transactional sense.”

Nilekani didn’t specify any cryptocurrencies. He may have been referring to Proof-of-Work cryptocurrencies such as BTC, which are powered by energy-intensive mining.

Conversely, Proof-of-Stake cryptocurrencies, such as Cardano and soon ETH 2.0, draw their power to validate transactions from funds pledged (“staked”) to the network. This uses a fraction of the power.

Nilekani said that India’s own Unified Payments Interface (UPI), an instant real-time payment system developed by the National Payments Corporation of India, is more efficient for everyday payments.

Nilekani has been closely involved with the development of UPI; he was appointed to lead an advisory panel on the digital payments infrastructure by the Reserve Bank of India in 2019.

Infosys is the country’s second-biggest tech company with a market cap of $82.19 billion and 250,000 employees.

Inside the Fight Against India’s Proposed Crypto Ban

As the man behind the country’s key digital projects, including e-governance and identity system Aadhar and highway toll collection system FASTag, Nilekani is one of the highest-profile advocates for crypto in the country.

Regulation would allow “the crypto guys to put their wealth into India’s economy,” he said.

The government was scheduled to introduce a crypto bill to protect investors from volatility by April 8, the last parliamentary session, but internal politics and a Covid-19 spiked caused a delay. The draft bill is expected to be introduced in the parliament’s next session, which starts in July.

The government hasn’t indicated exactly what the bill entails, but if the policymakers were to listen to Nilekani, India would treat crypto as a store of value, just like any other asset.

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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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