Bitcoin Mining Emissions In China Will Hit 130 Million Tons By 2024 (newscientist.com) 106
According to researchers in Beijing, China, the total carbon footprint of bitcoin mining in the country will peak in 2024, releasing around 130 million metric tons of carbon. This figure exceeds the annual carbon emissions of countries including Italy and the Czech Republic. New Scientist reports: By 2024, bitcoin mining in China will require 297 terawatt-hours of energy and account for approximately 5.4 per cent of the carbon emissions from generating electricity in the country. The researchers predicted the emissions peak in China in 2024 based on calculations of when the overall cost of mining -- the investment in computing equipment and the electricity costs -- outweighs the financial rewards of selling mined bitcoin. They used both financial projections and carbon emissions analysis to model the emissions footprint in China, taking into account factors such as location. Bitcoin miners in Beijing or other parts of northern China are very likely to be using electricity from coal-powered plants. Mining in southern provinces -- especially Guizhou, Yunnan and Sichuan -- is in large part powered by hydroelectricity, says Guan. The findings have been published in the journal Nature Communications.
Re: Another article: False and Stupid! (Score:1)
Lesser energy use -> faster decarbonization (Score:1)
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"the most important invention of the 21st century"
COVID?
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Your kidding right? "The most important invention..."?
I wonder how long (Score:2)
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Articles like this - testing the waters for just such a move.
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Poof there it goes.
No need to get governments involved.
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"Somewhere in the world"!? You clearly have no idea how blockchain works.
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"Somewhere in the world"!? You clearly have no idea how blockchain works.
You clearly have no idea how the rest of it works.
Only if it's economically viable (Score:4, Informative)
Okay, this should be obvious, but... this will only happen if it makes economic sense to mine the coin. My back-of-the-envelope calculations suggest that 297 TWh of energy should run somewhere in the neighborhood of $29 billion (to within a factor of 3 or so), so it only makes sense if you can mine enough coin to cover that cost plus your time and other costs.
That's... a lot of scratch. If the price of bitcoin falls, then this doesn't cost out for miners any more.
I'm not saying the events in this paper can't happen (though I think it's ludicrous), but that predicting the economics of bitcoin in 2024 is ridiculous on its face.
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Re:Only if it's economically viable (Score:5, Insightful)
Not just climate change (Score:4, Insightful)
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Considering how much effort the Chinese are putting into cleaning up I can see them banning crypto mining soon.
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Or at the very least, forcing Bitcoin mining operations in green-powered regions. China wants control of everything it can and for that reason I don't think they would want to let go of BTC mining.
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Mining is a race to the bottom in terms of cost. Only few miners having the lowest expenses will be profitable and survive in the long run. So, mining can only be profitable when done with very cheap electricity. That's why a significant amount of mining is performed near hydropower dams in Sichuan, China, that produce more electricity than the local
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Virtual +5 Informative
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Atheism is also better for the environment!
Atheists don't build churches/synagogues/etc. That means no resources being wasted maintaining and heating/cooling such buildings.
Atheists also don't commute to such buildings by the hundreds/thousands, thus not creating useless pollution and also not creating gridlocks by commuting by the hundreds/thousands all at once, both ways.
Also, not being a "professional sports" fan is also better for the environment for the exact same reasons.
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The post is by an AC, they don't exist in my Slashdot universe.
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Get rich quick scheme, FREE MONEY. Do you know what bitcoin would be worth in a sane society, NOTHING. Clearly insane is the problem, greed driven stupidity is the problem. No matter how pointless greed and free money will continue to drive the stupidity. If that were not the reality, then the value of bitcoin would already by zero. The value is currently driven by targeted manipulative marketing and greed driven stupidity.
Wasting that much energy on that, clearly, active regulatory measures have to be tak
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In a sane society, people would also not accept being paid in little rectangles of paper or numbers in a database.
Or if people do it anyway (Score:2)
Re: Or if people do it anyway (Score:1)
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I am guessing you also have a Robinhood account?
Hence the move to nuclear power (Score:2, Insightful)
China, and other countries are ramping up on use of nuclear power now - nuclear has also been approved in Europe for inclusion in green energy portfolios [neimagazine.com], and the U.S. is also saying that nuclear is a necessary part of a clean energy standard [arstechnica.com].
China itself has huge plans for nuclear [worldpoliticsreview.com], which you have to think is partly based around the anticipated further rise of crypto currency everywhere. So numbers like the power use we are seeing for crypto in the end are not that alarming, because in just a few decades
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China itself has huge plans for nuclear [worldpoliticsreview.com], which you have to think is partly based around the anticipated further rise of crypto currency everywhere.
Not fucking hardly.
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I don't know who Hardly is, but you're free not to fuck her/him if you don't want to.
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Just like my lighting cuban cigars with $100 bills habit is not a problem because in just a few decades I'm going to be rich.
Re:Hence the move to nuclear power (Score:5, Informative)
I admit I didn't check your links, just Wikipedia. It says China has 42 GW, with 10 GW more coming on-line soon, and 36 GW in plans after that. This would haul them up to 88GW out of 2200, or almost exactly 4% nuclear.
China's coal consumption, for the 1190 GW of coal plants, on the other hand, speaks for itself:
https://theatlas.com/charts/Ny... [theatlas.com]
Read the article (Score:1)
That's all just near-term stuff, and just in China - you should read the whole article. China and nuclear power is also about other countries, and one recent development is that China is buying Uranium mines wholesale to ensure supply. That along with research into much more advanced reactor designs, they plan to power a wide swath of the world (which will then be under the control, at least indirectly of China).
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So what? Does this change the energy wasted in heat and nuclear waste to nurture ultimate speculative NOTHING? When planet is melting, it is obviously suicidal act. Mankind is shelling out on stupidity, crowning itself as forefront wisdom.
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Those "estimate" by JPMorgan are dead wrong! (Score:2, Interesting)
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develop a new one and resell them after.
So they are resold and then continue to run. They don't magically stop using energy just because they are 2nd hand items...
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Yes but but estimate assume that those second hand machines are the fastest
No, it does not.
I guess that China could always (Score:1)
Build more coal plants, or dam off some more rivers.
There are plenty of Uyghurs looking for work. /s
A rationale for China to ban bitcoin (Score:2)
Maybe this is just providing a rationale for China to ban bitcoin and force people to use China's own centrally controlled digital currency. I am sure the CCP is not fond of bitcoin, given that it circumvents capital controls. I don't think the CCP really cares about carbon footprint.
20 years ago (Score:5, Interesting)
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Breaking Bitcoin Might Be Easy (Score:5, Interesting)
Bitcoin transactions are performed by the miners and validated by the nodes, and miners and nodes can try to hide but they seem easy to find.
The IP's have to be known to the upstream bitcoin network to perform work, right? Couldn't law enforcement simply create a bitcoin node, and then similar to how the RCAA went after bittorrent users by suing the IP's that downloaded their fake torrents, discover the IPs of the miners and transaction nodes and have their country's ISPs block all those IP's? Bitcoin would be dead in the water.
I don't see Bitcoin surviving a country-wide IP ban. It would be tough to enforce in the USA, but in less liberal countries it seems easy to kill off crypto. Is there something I'm not seeing?
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You can spin up a new node in minutes on any IP anywhere. There aren't servers and clients. There are nodes. Only a few nodes are really needed if the hashing difficulty is relaxed (the hashing difficulty is automatically adjusted periodically). The hashing difficulty scales itself over many, many orders of magnitude. Even though the networks total hash rate right now is staggering, that would not be necessary for the system to work if the number of nodes were reduced.
Taking over the network with bogus nod
Any liberal (Score:1)
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And the emissions are decentralized too (Score:2)
So it's win-win for bitcoin
Nice job, China. (Score:2)
THIS IS HOW THE WORLD ENDS.
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This is not all that dissimilar to gold, which is and has been mined primarily for exchange and bragging value, rather than usable value, and the mining caused much human suffering for the enrichment of few.
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Why is is ILLEGAL to give voters water?
I assume it's to avoid influencing voters via bottle stickers, other gifts or political t-shirts on the person handing them out.
(Okay folks, you can mod me "off-topic".)
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The GOP wants to make it as difficult as possible for non-Republicans to vote in future elections
Perhaps. But the point still stands: There should be no voter influence near any polling places. No "gifts". Isn't this a sound idea? People can bring their own water.
The Apocalyps will arrive on time and under budget (Score:2)
Consider bitcoin a lesson in the follies of conservation.
Soooo (Score:2)
We should ban bitcoin, not because the centralised financial systems are being subverted but "because it's bad for the climate".
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Blockchain not a solution to the BGP (Score:1)
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Haha (Score:2)
Yet another joke at the expense of the climate activist "serious people."