The recent that bitcoin mining is consuming more energy each year than Switzerland (population 8.4 million) was enough to make your average crypto enthusiast shift uncomfortably in their chair. These are, after all, environmentally perilous times and you’d be hard-pressed to convince people that mining bitcoin is more important than the energy needs of a nation that offers us high-quality chocolate, cuckoo clocks and the principle of wartime neutrality.
So, it begs asking: is our little experiment in alternative economics worth the of electricity that bitcoin mining is currently thought to consume? An amount that has increased by 800% over the last two-and-a-half years? I mean, what would Greta Thunberg say?
Before you firesale your BTC and rip up your private keys, it bears burrowing a little deeper into these figures and how they play out in the real world. First, as the people behind the are at pains to point out, it is very hard to produce a solid estimate of how much energy bitcoin mining actually consumes; their range varies from 32TWh to 161TWh.
But even if we took the best case estimate, we’re still talking about (and I believe this is the technical term) a shitload of power, and most of that power is coming from China, spiritual home of the coal-fired power plant.
Yet this is less straightforward than it first appears. Unlike most industrial consumers of energy, bitcoin mining is highly mobile. Those giant ASIC setups can and will be taken wherever it makes economic sense to put them. Increasingly that means right next to renewable sources producing more energy than they can profitably sell into the grid.
For utilities this is a way of monetising otherwise wasted energy, for miners it’s a source of plentiful, cheap electricity. For instance, in China’s mountainous Sichuan province, giant dams produce a comically large surplus of hydropower – around 800TWh a year. As a result, Sichuan is now home to an estimated 42% of bitcoin’s hashing power. It’s a pattern being repeated all over the world; just ask .
We can’t pretend that there’s no environmental cost to bitcoin mining, but it’s worth putting it in perspective: bitcoin uses significantly less power than the world’s gaming consoles and most of those are drawing off much dirtier power grids than bitcoin.
Now, here’s the hopium. By offering sustainable energy sources a way of selling excess electricity, bitcoin mining drives both profits and investment in the renewable sector. So, while it might seem counterintuitive, bitcoin’s exaggerated energy needs may actually be furthering the Clean Energy Revolution. And that’s something even Greta might applaud.
What’s the difference between proof-of-work and proof-of-stake? Is one better than the other?
In order for a blockchain to be verifiable it needs to have some sort of consensus mechanism – a way in which all the computers using the network agree that a given transaction is valid.
For bitcoin, this is achieved using a proof-of-work (PoW) algorithm. A bunch of transactions are pooled into a block, then the network competes to solve a complex computation problem. When a given computer solves the problem it’s rewarded with bitcoin and all the transactions inside the block are verified.
PoW is an elegant system, but (as discussed above) hugely wasteful and energy inefficient. A number of alternatives have been mooted, primarily proof-of-stake (PoS). Rather than mining new coins, in PoS networks people stake the coins they own as a way of contributing to the verification process. If your stake is chosen to verify the next block, then you’re rewarded with more coins. However, unlike PoW, the consequences of PoS are and require the use of terrifying phrases like Byzantine Fault Tolerance.
The tl;dr? We know PoW works, but it’s an energy hungry monster. PoS is cleaner but no-one knows how to make it work in the long-term. The latter may change, but until then the former will continue to dominate the cryptocurrency space.
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