Follow on Google News News By Tag Industry News News By Location Country(s) Industry News
Follow on Google News | ![]() Reducing the Environmental Cost of Cyber Currency MiningWe investigate if the Cyber Currency markets can change on their own, or whether they will be forced to switch to lower energy cost methods.
By: Formaspace Yet, as it turns out, cryptocurrency mining remains one of the world's major energy consumers. Can the Cyber Currency markets change on their own, or will they be forced to switch to lower energy cost methods? We investigate in this Formaspace technology report. Analysts at the Cambridge Center for Alternative Finance (CCAF) reckon that each year crypto mining consumes just over 0.5 per cent of global energy production – e.g. about as much electricity as Sweden or Malaysia. So far, cryptocurrency mining has been able to escape the growing reach of environmental regulations, but for how long? It looks like the tide is turning. In recent times, China had emerged as one of the world's biggest havens for crypto mining operations – until the Chinese government cracked down on them to reduce the drain on the power grid and reduce China's notorious air pollution problem. In response, many large-scale crypto mining operations have begun relocating to areas with lower environmental regulations, such as Texas, which has recently become one of the leading centers for crypto mining since the Chinese crackdown. But as the Texas electric grid struggles at times to satisfy growing demand and avoid outright catastrophic failures (such as during the February 2021 freeze that knocked the grid to its knees), regulators are looking for ways to reduce the burden that crypto mining puts on the power generation system. Cyber Mining For Bitcoins: The Underlying Proof Of Work Algorithm So how did we get into this situation, to begin with? Let's take a look at the OG of cryptocurrencies, which is Bitcoin, to explain. To establish Bitcoin as a currency that operated outside the hands of administrators (or regulators, as critics maintain), there needed to be a way to issue new specie (e.g. coins) without flooding the market too quickly and tanking the value of the new Bitcoin. The solution, crypto mining, is actually very clever. In effect, it simulates the work done by miners digging into the earth to find gold nuggets. And, like real gold mining, cyber mining is very competitive. But instead of digging or panning for physical gold, each cyber miner tries to outcompete its rivals in performing "proof of work" algorithms. Read more...https://formaspace.com/ End
|