In fact, many miners who were using abundant hydro power in the Yunnan or Sichuan provinces moved to Kazakhstan, which has a highly fossil-fueled power grid. Today, the U.S. composes roughly 30-40% of global Bitcoin mining (the best data we have comes from Cambridge University, but it’s somewhat dated and imprecise). The most popular other countries are, in rough order, China (yes, despite the ban, there’s about 17% of hashrate in China), Russia, Canada, Kazakhstan, Indonesia, Paraguay, Norway and Venezuela. We also know that Bitcoin mining directly finances the governments of Russia, Iran, Venezuela and North Korea. These regimes use Bitcoin mining for sanctions evasion, to turn their mineral wealth into cash. Attacking domestic miners in the U.S. hashrate simply means that other miners are more profitable on net, because their share of the pie is bigger.
Related posts
-
Pennsylvania introduces bill to implement strategic bitcoin reserve
Pennsylvania’s legislature has introduced a bill allowing the state to invest in Bitcoin. Led by Representative... -
Bitcoin Trader Unrealized Profit Margins At High Levels – Risk Of Correction?
Este artículo también está disponible en español. Bitcoin set a new all-time high yesterday, reaching $93,483,... -
Bitcoin Surge Drives Deribit to $40.8 Billion Open Interest Peak
Deribit reached an all-time high in open interest this week, totaling $37.6 billion across bitcoin and...