{"id":243,"date":"2022-02-25T15:00:00","date_gmt":"2022-02-25T16:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/sierrascreen.com\/?p=243"},"modified":"2023-11-19T10:03:57","modified_gmt":"2023-11-19T10:03:57","slug":"bitcoin-less-green-than-ever-before","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/sierrascreen.com\/index.php\/2022\/02\/25\/bitcoin-less-green-than-ever-before\/","title":{"rendered":"Bitcoin less \u201cgreen\u201d than ever before"},"content":{"rendered":"
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For many years, the Bitcoin community has argued that the network is running on a significant share of renewable energy sources.<\/span> When China banned cryptocurrency mining in the Spring of 2021, Bitcoiners doubled down on this claim – arguing that the miners were forced to move to “greener” locations. Just recently, the Bitcoin Mining Council claimed that 58.5% of the electricity used by the Bitcoin mining industry is coming from renewable energy sources.<\/p>\n Even though the mining crackdown in China during the Spring of 2021 did shake up global Bitcoin mining activity, we can now establish that this crackdown drastically reduced the use of renewable electricity sources for Bitcoin mining. This is the conclusion of a new research paper on the electricity mix and carbon footprint of the Bitcoin network (titled Revisiting Bitcoin\u2019s carbon footprin<\/a>t) that was published in the Elsevier journal Joule on February 25, 2022.<\/p>\n The article specifically finds that that the share of renewables that power the network decreased from 41.6% to 25.1%. Miners previously had access to a substantial amount of renewables (during a limited part of the year) when they were still in China (i.e. hydropower during the wet season in the summer months), but this was lost when they were forced to move to countries such as the U.S. and Kazakhstan. These locations now mainly supply Bitcoin miners with either coal- or gas-based electricity, which has also boosted the carbon intensity of the electricity used for Bitcoin mining. The article highlights that the average carbon intensity of electricity consumed by the Bitcoin network may have increased from 478.27 gCO2\/kWh on average in 2020 to 557.76 gCO2\/kWh in August 2021. This means the carbon intensity of mining has gone up by around 17%.<\/p>\n