Climate groups say a change in coding can reduce bitcoin energy consumption by 
99%

A simple switch in the way transactions are verified could reduce bitcoin’s 
energy-guzzling mining habits

By Dominic Rushe  29 Mar 2022
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2022/mar/29/bitcoin-reduce-energy-consumption-climate-groups


Bitcoin mining already uses as much energy as Sweden, according to some 
reports, and its booming popularity is revitalizing failing fossil fuel 
enterprises in the US.

But all that could change with a simple switch in the way it is coded, 
according to a campaign launched on Tuesday.

The campaign, called Change the Code Not the Climate and coordinated by 
Environmental Working Group, Greenpeace USA and several groups battling bitcoin 
mining facilities in their communities, is calling on bitcoin to change the way 
bitcoins are mined in order to tackle its outsized carbon footprint.

The software code that bitcoin uses – known as “proof of work” – requires the 
use of massive computer arrays to validate and secure transactions. Proof of 
work is a way of checking that a miner has solved the extremely complex 
cryptographic puzzles needed to add to the bitcoin ledger.

Rival cryptocurrency etherium is shifting to another system – “proof of stake” 
– that it believes will reduce its energy use by 99%. In the proof of stake 
model, miners pledge their coins to verify transactions; adding inaccurate 
information leads to penalties.

With the value and use of cryptocurrencies rising, the campaign’s organizers 
argue bitcoin must follow suit or find another, less energy intensive, method.

“This is a big problem. In part because of where the industry stands now but 
also because of our concerns about its growth,” said Michael Brune, campaign 
director and former executive director of Sierra Club.

The US now leads the world in cryptocurrency mining after China launched a 
crackdown on mining and trading last May.

“Coal plants which were dormant or slated to be closed are now being revived 
and solely dedicated to bitcoin mining.

Gas plants, which in many cases were increasingly economically uncompetitive, 
are also now being dedicated to bitcoin mining. We are seeing this all across 
the country,” said Brune.

Brune added: “It’s particularly painful to see this in the electric sector 
because that is precisely the place where the US has made most of its progress 
in the last decade,” he said. “There’s no way we can reach our climate goals if 
we are reviving fossil fuel plants.

Some bitcoin miners have recently begun powering their operations using 
renewable energy from wind and solar.

But Brune said while such moves were “clearly well-intentioned”, adding “some 
boutique wind or solar operations powering a few high- profile mining 
operations” would not do enough to counter the environmental cost.

“Fossil fuel growth is outpacing renewable growth in bitcoin mining and that’s 
the fundamental challenge,” Brune said.

Without a change to the code, the fundamental problem will remain that 
bitcoin’s code “incentivizes maximum energy use”, said Chris Larsen, founder 
and executive chairman of crypto company Ripple and a climate activist. “The 
minute that there is the opportunity to go to something dirty, which is what 
you are seeing, that is going to happen.”

One “nightmare scenario”, he said, is that the world does get to a renewable 
future in China, the US and EU but countries rich in fossil fuel switch to 
bitcoin mining to keep their operations running.

“Imagine the Saudis sitting on all that oil, which has a cost of about ½ cent 
per kilowatt hour – no renewable can match that,” Larsen said. “Bitcoin mining 
could be this endless monetization engine for fossil fuels. That would be a 
nightmare.”

The campaign is launching with digital advertising in the Wall Street Journal, 
New York Times, Marketwatch, Politico, Facebook and other publications.

Organizers are also taking legal action against proposed mining sites and using 
their large memberships to push bitcoin’s biggest investors and influencers to 
call for a code change. “In this world, with all these smart people, there has 
got to be a better solution,” said Larsen.


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