Despite the hopes of many, it looks like the current downturn in cryptocurrencies hasn't been enough to put a significant dent in the current environmental impacts of mining and using these digital currencies.
The Guardian asked Alex de Vries who's a data scientist at the Dutch central bank and the founder of Digiconomist, a service which tracks the sustainability of cryptocurrencies, about the current climate. Given the energy required to mine these coins is often dictated by their market worth, there was the chance that the environment might be getting a bit of a break with the current crypto crash some coins are experiencing. However, De Vries explains why that's not the case, at least not yet.
The environmental impact of proof of work cryptocurrency mining goes beyond just the intended and aware act of mining. The surge in buying the rigs and demand for parts capable of getting good results plays its own part on the manufacturing side.
Then, once these mining rigs are bought and set up, there's not a lot of reason to turn them off. Unless the coins drop below the amount of the cost of power it takes to mine, the incentive to shut it down just isn't there. Plus there's all the people who might not notice until much later down the line. Here's a gentle reminder to turn that mining rig off if you already hadn't.
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Again, from an individual perspective the environmental impacts don't always feel that huge, but De Vries goes on to show the scale of some of these operations. He estimates bitcoin consumes about 204 terrawatt-hours of electricity each year. That's more than Thailand, and a whole bunch of other literal
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