Cryptocurrency: Its Energy/Carbon Far Less Than Costs of Legacy Financial System

grarpamp grarpamp at gmail.com
Tue May 25 13:10:37 PDT 2021


The 'Greening' Of Bitcoin: Will China's Forced Mining Exodus Crush
Anti-ESG Case?

China's crackdown on crypto may have a silver lining after all.

While Beijing's bitcoin battering efforts - for myriad reasons
including a lack of centralized control (translation: use our CBDC or
else), a pathway for capital outflows (translation: use our CBDC or
else), and the latest somewhat humorous "crypto does not meet China's
carbon goals" - have, along with Elon's tweets, tamped down enthusiasm
for the cryptocurrency; the perhaps unintended consequence of the
actions of Musk (reversing his advocate position by highlighting the
anti-ESG case) and China's regulatory crackdown (again) will be the
'greening' of crypto and inevitably enabling more progressive asset
allocators to move reserves its way.

    "In recent days, crypto-currency trading has been too hot in China
which attracted many individual investors. It's necessary that the
government rolls out warnings in case any large risks materialize,"
Cao Yin, managing director of Digital Renaissance Foundation and a
bitcoin investor, said.

And it could be happening sooner than expected as China's Global Times
(broadly considered Beijing's mouthpiece) reports that China's recent
ban on bitcoin-related activity will reshape the landscape of the
global mining industry and force more Chinese miners to migrate
overseas, such as to the US.

    "Chinese miners account for over half of the global crypto
network's processing power, and this will also weigh on the
development of the global mining industry in the long run," the
insider said.

Some bitcoin mines use thermal power sources that can't pass the
government's environmental impact assessments, and thus run counter to
the country's carbon-neutrality goals, Cao said.

But, as Global Times writes, according to Cao, some bitcoin mines in
China are now ready to purchase carbon emissions quotas. The exodus
started in 2017 but is now speeding up, as mines look for regions with
cheaper electricity rates and more friendly policies.

    "It's possible that bitcoin mines may eventually move out of
China, but production and exports of bitcoin mining machines won't
stop in China because of market demands," Cao said.

The rotation from relatively power-hungry Proof-of-Work currencies to
less power-intensive Proof-of-Stake currencies remains but has lost
some of its sheen recently...

Circling back to where we started, China could be about to become
bitcoin bulls' best friend...

    China is the bitcoin bears biggest friend: as long as bitcoin can
be mined in China it is "dirty"

    Once China bans bitcoin mining there, the anti-ESG case collapse
    — zerohedge (@zerohedge) May 21, 2021

Of course, this all comes a day after Elon Musk and Michael Saylor
"spoke with North American Bitcoin miners. They committed to publish
current & planned renewable usage & to ask miners WW to do so.
Potentially promising."

It wasn't immediately clear if any Chinese bitcoin miners are part of
this organization - they should be, after all the dirtiest bitcoin
mining takes place in China's infamous Xinjiang region - but it's a
start, and if indeed we are about to see mining standardization, one
which pushes more output to the US and other "clean" regions, this
could be just the catalyst that eliminates the biggest ESG complaint
against cryptos.


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