Economic estimation of Bitcoin mining’s climate damages demonstrates closer resemblance to digital crude than digital gold

Sun, 16 Oct 2022 11:58:57 +1100

Andrew Pam <xanni [at] glasswings.com.au>

Andrew Pam
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-022-18686-8

"This paper provides economic estimates of the energy-related climate damages
of mining Bitcoin (BTC), the dominant proof-of-work cryptocurrency. We provide
three sustainability criteria for signaling when the climate damages may be
unsustainable. BTC mining fails all three. We find that for 2016–2021: (i) per
coin climate damages from BTC were increasing, rather than decreasing with
industry maturation; (ii) during certain time periods, BTC climate damages
exceed the price of each coin created; (iii) on average, each $1 in BTC market
value created was responsible for $0.35 in global climate damages, which as a
share of market value is in the range between beef production and crude oil
burned as gasoline, and an order-of-magnitude higher than wind and solar power.
Taken together, these results represent a set of sustainability red flags.
While proponents have offered BTC as representing “digital gold,” from a
climate damages perspective it operates more like “digital crude”."

Via a co-worker at Block.

Cheers,
       *** Xanni ***
--
mailto:xanni@xanadu.net               Andrew Pam
http://xanadu.com.au/                 Chief Scientist, Xanadu
https://glasswings.com.au/            Partner, Glass Wings
https://sericyb.com.au/               Manager, Serious Cybernetics

Comment via email

Home E-Mail Sponsors Index Search About Us