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Crypto Miners’ Energy, Climate Costs Draw White House Scrutiny

Crypto Miners’ Energy, Climate Costs Draw White House Scrutiny
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The Biden administration is teeing up policy recommendations to lower cryptocurrency mining’s energy consumption and emissions footprint, marking its first major foray into a poorly understood industry that critics say threatens U.S. climate goals and strains the power grid.

“It’s important, if this is going to be part of our financial system in any meaningful way, that it’s developed responsibly and minimizes total emissions,” Costa Samaras, principal assistant director for energy for the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, told Bloomberg Law.

“When we think about digital assets, it has to be a climate and energy conversation,” Samaras said.

The report, expected in August, could be one of the first studies following President Joe Biden’s executive order in March pressing federal agencies to ensure the “responsible” mining of digital assets such as cryptocurrency.

Carrot or Stick

But whether any policy action follows the recommendations remains unclear.

The Energy Department, which issues efficiency standards and studies clean technology, was unable to provide a person to speak on cryptocurrency energy usage. The Environmental Protection Agency broadly doesn’t regulate energy usage by specific consumers or industries. The EPA’s inaction on the issue drew criticism from some congressional Democrats in April.

Some see the role of the federal government as shaping disclosures to investors who will then push crypto miners to clean up their operations.

“I have a really hard time seeing some sort of a stick approach,” said Jesse Morris, CEO of Energy Web, a technology company that works with utilities and consumers to accelerate decarbonization. “I think the most bang for their buck is going to be on education and disclosure of bitcoin mining—and that would send a huge signal, too.”

Last month, Energy Web unveiled a scoring system that would show how Bitcoin miners—and potential other industries—are using their consumption to drive lower emissions.

“The big indicator that we’ve got traction is when an investor comes out and says, ‘That’s what I want to use,’” Morris said.

Strained Sector

The energy-intensive process of mining—completing and verifying transactions of Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other decentralized digital tokens—is hitting an electric sector already facing a cascade of demands from extreme weather, aging wires, a shift to renewable energy, and a push to electrify transportation.

The study aims to drill down into claims that have touted cryptocurrency as a societal benefit or criticized it as a local nuisance and a climate nightmare, said Samaras, a Carnegie Mellon University professor who was tapped last November for a new White House energy team.

The team plans to assess everything from local noise pollution to the energy efficiency of using different mining techniques—comparing Bitcoin’s proof-of-work technique with proof-of-stake, which is used by other cryptocurrencies and is more than 99% more energy efficient.

“We’ve seen reports about noise, local pollution, older fossil generators being restarted in communities,” Samaras said. “These are not trivial loads.”

This year, Ethereum is planning a switch from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake. Bitcoin, despite public campaigns calling for it to follow suit, has announced no plans to do so, and there appears to be little interest in such a change. The decentralized nature of the Bitcoin blockchain means that a diverse group of miners—who last year earned more than $15 billion, according to data from The Block Research—would have to be brought on board.

More Power Than Pakistan

Cryptocurrency mining depends on large amounts of energy. As more people have filled their digital wallets, the crypto industry has seen a 20-fold boom in demand in electricity over the last five years, by one measure.

Mines, or mining farms, may consist of thousands of servers stacked in warehouses. They deploy raw computing power to solve a series of complex math problems, consuming more electricity each year than many individual countries, including Pakistan and Finland, according to the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index. Its global annual consumption is roughly equal to all the lights and televisions in the US combined, the index estimates.

The “very first thing” the White House should address is measuring the scale of the industry, said Matteo Benetton, a finance professor at the University of California, Berkeley, who co-authored a report on cryptocurrency mining in Upstate New York.

The study, published last year, found mining in the region pushed up monthly electric bills by about $8 for households and $12 for small businesses. Local government tax revenue increases from the mining development offset only about 15% of the hiked costs to locals, according to the study.

As miners have headed to areas with cheap power and cooler weather to run their servers—often with generous government subsidies—a database showing location, power consumption, and local impacts offers benefits, Benetton said.

These databases “could be very valuable to judge how much electricity they’re consuming or some of the claims I’ve heard recently that they are even improving the network, increasing the flexibility, and so on,” Benetton said. “If some of these companies are doing good for the grid, why don’t they disclose the data?”

Company Registry

Some comments on the March executive order have urged the White House to create a registry of companies that use the more intensive proof-of-work technique.

Then the Energy Department should issue an efficiency standard that would move miners away from that method, according to comments filed by Greenpeace, Environmental Working Group and Earthjustice.

The EPA should institute stringent reviews of every air and water permit issued or renewed for any proof-of-work mining operations, the groups wrote. Such policies are crucial to meeting the Biden administration’s goal of achieving net-zero greenhouse gas emissions from the power sector by 2035 and across the U.S. economy by 2050.

“Many of the most noxious mining operations can operate as-of-right under preexisting and permissive air and water permits or zoning regulations, despite the change in operations and the negative impacts to local residents and the climate,” the groups wrote.

Turning Off Servers

The White House energy team will be keeping an open mind as it collects evidence, Samaras said.

“We need to think about what would be the appropriate policy responses under a world that shifted to proof-of-stake, or a world that has some continuous mix of proof-of-work and proof-of-stake,” Samaras said. “Proof-of-work is energy-intensive by design, but it also increases security.”

The team will study claims made in recent months—in places like Texas—that mining facilities could provide grid operators with flexibility by agreeing to temporarily shut down during times of peak demand.

A central question, Samaras said, concerns the economic incentive for miners to turn off their servers, given the opportunity to make money by running all the time.

“We’ve seen miners set up in places where the electricity prices are low and they’ve secured favorable industrial rates,” he said. “I would like to go see the evidence that an afternoon peak mining tariff slows down mining operations.”



Read More:Crypto Miners’ Energy, Climate Costs Draw White House Scrutiny

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