Ethereum Mining Is Going Away, and Miners Are Not Happy

The shift from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake will cut power consumption 
sharply—and leave some expensive technology searching for new uses.

By Olga Kharif and David Pan  June 16, 2022  
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-06-16/ethereum-mining-tweak-renders-some-crypto-tech-worthless


The Ethereum mining community is a diverse bunch, geographically and 
demographically.

There’s a 28-year-old translator in Ukraine, running computing hardware on his 
balcony. In Argentina, a retiree uses her gaming PC to double her monthly 
pension. A college student in Canada has mined enough to buy a modified 2006 
Dodge Charger SRT—and pay for gas every month.

As many people even outside of the blockchain world know, a crash in the crypto 
markets has made the past few months quite painful for anyone whose financial 
well-being is tied to the currencies.

As of June 15, the price of Ether was down about 70% for the year.

At the same time, a lesser-known factor—a tectonic shift known as “the 
Merge”—is set to end Ethereum mining altogether, cutting off earnings for as 
many as 1 million people.

“This will be a huge financial hit and almost a complete loss of a good source 
of income,” says the Ukrainian translator, who asked to stay anonymous for fear 
of being robbed.

Bitcoin and Ethereum, the two largest cryptocurrency networks by market value, 
both record transactions using a process known as proof-of-work, where 
so-called miners dedicate computer resources toward solving difficult math 
problems to add blocks of transactions to a public ledger. The miners receive 
payments in cryptocurrency as a reward.

Bitcoin mining, which generally involves specialized gear, has become 
industrialized; and as mining has moved to data centers, participation by 
regular people has basically been eliminated. But Ethereum mining relies on the 
kind of graphics cards found inside typical gaming PCs, and many regular folks 
can still do it.

Proof-of-work is just a contest to make computers work hard, which means it 
uses an enormous amount of energy. The environmental toll it takes is one of 
the primary criticisms of cryptocurrencies. Since Ethereum’s beginnings, its 
developers have been preparing for a shift to an alternative model called 
proof-of-stake.

Under such a system, people would set aside, or “stake,” a certain amount of 
Ether, the cryptocurrency of the Ethereum blockchain, to win rewards for 
running software that properly batches transactions into new blocks and checks 
the work of other validators.

Proof-of-stake could cut the power consumption of the Ethereum network by about 
99%. It would also put miners out of a job, a significant blow given the 
capital investment that goes into setting up operations.

Ethereum miners have spent approximately $15 billion on graphics processing 
units (GPUs), according to Bitpro Consulting, and that doesn’t include 
ancillary costs like wiring and transformers.

The Merge is expected to take place in August, though no official date has been 
given.

It’s already been pushed back multiple times, and many miners hope that’ll 
happen again. “I don’t think they’re going to be able to pull it off” anytime 
soon, says Aydin Kilic, chief operating officer at Hive, an industrial Ethereum 
miner.

But other people involved with Ethereum see the Merge as inevitable. “The odds 
of it not happening this year are very low,” from 1% to 10%, says Tim Beiko, a 
computer scientist who coordinates Ethereum developers. “The thing I want to 
avoid is someone buying a mining GPU today and the Merge happens this summer,” 
making it almost worthless.

Despite all this, miners are actually expanding their operations. Prices on 
GPUs have dropped by more than half since the start of the year, leading to a 
surge of purchases. Ethereum’s hashrate—a measure of how much mining power is 
supporting the network—has almost doubled in the last year, according to 
tracker Etherscan.

Even in the current crypto price slump, mining Ethereum is more profitable than 
supporting any other major coin, including Bitcoin. “I would guess that people 
are trying to get as much as possible before it ends,” says Slava Karpenko, 
chief technical officer of 2Miners, an organization that helps smaller miners 
pool their resources to support Ethereum. The group’s number of active users 
has climbed 70% since November, to about 120,000, he says.

Still, recouping costs has become more challenging because of Ether’s price 
drop. Mike Lam, a 38-year-old engineer from Ontario who’s been mining for a 
year, has earned only about $5,000 worth of crypto on his initial $30,000 
hardware investment; he also pays about $650 in monthly electricity costs.

Aaron Petzold, 24, a recent college graduate who’s mining Ethereum at his 
parents’ house in Wisconsin, says he’s about four months away from recouping 
his investment of more than $28,000. “My hope is I am going to continue mining 
until the end,” he says. “It’s a lot of uncertainty. No one really knows what’s 
going to happen. There are a lot of people who I think are in denial.”

Miners won’t be left with nothing. After the Merge, their mining setups will 
still be powerful computing devices that can be put to use elsewhere, and some 
are planning to mine other coins or find alternative uses for the gear.

After the Merge, Petzold is considering using his rigs for an aspect of digital 
video production known as rendering, which can require significant computing 
resources. “There are other uses for the cards: You can make it into a render 
farm, you can do different machine-learning options,” he says. “They are just 
not going to be as profitable as mining has been.”

Canadian mining pool operator Flexpool is looking to add more coins for its 
members to mine and plans to deploy its developers to code for other crypto 
projects, says an executive who asked to be identified only as Chris for fear 
of getting robbed. “It’s like a typewriter company,” he says. “No one is buying 
typewriters anymore, so you have to shift into other businesses using the 
capital you made in typewriters.”

Others, like Ivan Zhang, 35, and Karol Przybytkowski, 36, plan to sell their 
stable of graphics cards and use their upstate New York facility to host the 
gear of other miners for a fee. But with many Ethereum miners likely to rush to 
sell right after the Merge, GPU prices are expected to decline further.

Bitpro plans to stop buying graphics cards within weeks, says Mark D’Aria, its 
chief executive officer. “My perspective is, no matter what we pay today it is 
going to be way less after this event,” D’Aria says. “We are just going to sit 
there and watch that happen and then pick up the pieces.”

Some miners are hoping to do better by moving to mine other coins that require 
GPUs, such as Ethereum Classic or Ravencoin. The more miners who flock to any 
coin, the harder it is to make a profit. But crypto breeds optimism, and miners 
are building the rationale for why their operations will be the ones to survive.

Mikel-Angelo Chalfoun, 30, pays $9,000 a year for a warehouse in Dubai to house 
and power his 76 graphics cards. He says he’ll be able to outcompete miners 
with higher costs. “No matter how cheap crypto will become, no matter how harsh 
the crypto winter will be, I am good, I will never mine at a loss,” he says.

Other miners just feel betrayed. “Up until the Merge, they need the miners! 
It’s kind of weird,” says Lam, the Canadian engineer, who runs 50 graphics 
cards in his basement. “They need us. They need us up until the point they toss 
us away.”

---
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to