Montana governor signs pro-cryptocurrency mining bill into law

Greg Gianforte, the governor of Montana, has signed into law a bill largely preventing local governments in the state from passing laws prohibiting cryptocurrency mining.

According to records with the Montana legislature, Gianforte signed S.B. 178 into law on May 2 after the bill had passed both the state House and Senate. The legislation effectively enshrines crypto minersโ€™ rights in the state by revising existing laws, prohibiting discriminatory electrical rates for mining firms and not allowing taxation for crypto used as a method of payment.

The latest version of the bill suggested that the legislation was introduced partly as a preventive measure in response to certain proposals in other states โ€” i.e. โ€œdigital asset mining has often faced difficulty with regulations at the state and local level.” For example, in April, lawmakers in the Texas state Senate introduced a bill aimed at limiting incentives for crypto miners through participation in a program intended to compensate them for load reductions on the stateโ€™s power grid.

Crypto advocacy group Satoshi Action Fund has supported pro-mining legislation in certain states. Lawmakers in the Arkansas state House and Senate passed a bill similar to Montanaโ€™s S.B. 178. Satoshi Action Fund CEO Dennis Porter reported Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders had already signed this bill into law, but the legislatureโ€™s website did not show such an action at the time of publication.

โ€œAt the state level, we can have a lot of progress, we can move things forward, and there isnโ€™t a whole lot the federal government can do in the meantime,โ€ said Porter.

Related: The economics of cryptocurrency mining: Costs, revenues and market trends

Similar pro-mining legislation had been moving forward in the Mississippi state legislature, but the bill โ€œdiedโ€ in March. Porter said a Missouri bill was โ€œa further little behind in the processโ€ but still progressing in the legislature.

At the federal level, the Biden administration recently renewed a push for a 30% tax on cryptocurrency miners as part of an FY2024 budget proposal. The tax would potentially target minersโ€™ electricity usage.

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