Bitcoin’s net emissions are down for 3rd month in a row
New data shows that the Bitcoin mining industry reduced its output by a whole mega ton of CO2 emissions in three months.
The environmental impact of Bitcoin mining has been a hot topic in the past year, especially in the U.S. Following the coveted mining ban in China, a huge number of large mining operations set up shop in the U.S., taking advantage of loose regulation and low energy prices.
The influx of mining companies to the U.S. raised concerns about their impact on energy consumption, as many regulators feared that they would raise demand for fossil-fuel-based energy.
However, the latest research from Daniel Batten, the founder of CH4Capital, shows that the net emissions from Bitcoin mining have significantly decreased.
The research looked at Bitcoin’s electricity consumption as estimated by the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index (CBECI) and adjusted it to account for various energy sources miners use. It found that the net emissions from Bitcoin mining in the U.S. have dropped from 35.3 megatons of CO2 in December 2022 to 32.04 megatons of CO2 in February 2023.
And while Batten acknowledged that these calculations rely on Cambridge’s data which tend to overestimate electrical consumption, he noted that the downward trend still remains in place.
A huge part of this decrease can be attributed to Marathon Digital, one of the largest public Bitcoin mining companies in the U.S. In December, Marathon announced that around 100,000 of its newly acquired ASIC miners would be hosted on wind and solar farms, deploying the majority of them in Texas. The company will deploy 133,000 miners in total across the U.S., with all of them powered by renewable energy sources.
The push towards renewable energy in the U.S. will most likely cause other large miners to consider solar and wind power.