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Bitcoin Power

As Environmental Criticism Mounts, Bitcoin Miners Eye Nuclear Power (livemint.com) 158

"Bitcoin miners, under fire for their sizable environmental footprint, are forging partnerships with owners of struggling nuclear-power plants with electricity to spare," reports the Wall Street Journal: The matchups have the potential to solve key issues facing each industry, executives and analysts say: Electricity-hungry bitcoin miners want stable and carbon-free power, while nuclear plants facing competition from cheaper power sources need new customers.

Talen Energy Corp. has entered into a joint venture with bitcoin-mining company TeraWulf Inc., which has started land development for a mining facility the size of four football fields next to its Pennsylvania nuclear plant. Nuclear generator Energy Harbor Corp. will provide power to a Standard Power mining center in Ohio starting in December... New nuclear projects are eyeing cryptocurrency miners as well: Startup Oklo Inc., which plans to build a small-scale fission power plant that can run on used nuclear fuel, has signed a 20-year supply deal with hardware and hosting firm Compass Mining.

"Both industry's challenges are the other industry's positives," said Sean Lawrie, partner at consulting firm ScottMadden Inc....

"At the core of bitcoin mining is energy and energy infrastructure," said Paul Prager, chief executive of TeraWulf.

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As Environmental Criticism Mounts, Bitcoin Miners Eye Nuclear Power

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  • by Lisandro ( 799651 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @07:54AM (#61836899)

    How green/sustainable your power source is becomes irrelevant when you're turning 170 TWh into pure heat. Bitcoin is effectively a space heater consuming more power than Poland.

    • by e3m4n ( 947977 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @08:23AM (#61836981)
      Not to mention every KWh wasted on mining is a KWh that could have gone to another demand. One that now will have to use carbon sources to fill. Conservation is just as important as green sources in a zero-sum global game of energy supply; until all sources are green anyway. There should never be excess green energy lying around so long as dirty sources are still being burned. Thats fundamentally broken from the starting gate.
      • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @10:51AM (#61837477)

        This cannot be overstated. The solution to global warming is not to make horrendously wasteful activities green, it's to stop doing horrendously wasteful activities. If I run an AC with the window open powered by a wind turbine, I don't deserve a pat on the back, I deserve a kick in the balls, one hard enough to ensure I don't breed.

        We spend an inordinate amount of effort on improving the efficiency of the world right now. Cars which consume less fuel. Fridges which consume less electricity. Banning Dell's shitty energy inefficient "gaming" PCs from California. Ever tighter minimum standards on heating system. Ever increasing efficiency requirements for new constructions.

        To mine bitcoin for any reason is absolutely unconscionable. At least mining coal keeps the lights on somewhere.

        • Agreed, there's no point to bitcoin. What is the societal purpose? None. The mining is only done to make a few people richer, without actually providing actual industry. This is similar to gold mining, we already have all the gold we need to industrial purpose, any extra gold does nothing that benefits society and has too much that damages society.

      • The hilarious thing is that BTC could be the reason some finally see their dream of abundant nuclear power finally play out. I mean if the operators' making big buckage as long as it's on at least they'll maintain the upkeep.

      • Not to mention every KWh wasted on mining is a KWh that could have gone to another demand.

        Maybe, maybe not. It's really not that simple. The fact that you have generation capacity available in one place doesn't mean that you can necessarily deliver the power to where it's needed.

        Also, as Noah Smith points out [substack.com] it's possible that BTC could help to subsidize the construction of solar, by making it economical to overbuild capacity. Overbuilding ensures that capacity is still sufficient to meet demand on cloudy days, and using the excess power to mine BTC would provide a profitable use of that exce

        • Most, not all, grids are cross-connected so that a disaster does not render an area without power for months. Hurricanes knock out an area; they repair the lines and buy power from another supplier. This has been part of the national design since around the time DARPA created DARPAnet. I would hope Europe did this even sooner considering how much germany bombed the shit out of rail, road, and infrastructure.
      • Not to mention every KWh wasted on mining is a KWh that could have gone to another demand. One that now will have to use carbon sources to fill.

        Nukes for bitcoin is the perfect Biden era solution, only perception matters, not reality.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      This scheme isn't very green or sustainable anyway. The fuel comes from mines, and the waste has nowhere to go. The plant itself generates a lot of emissions during construction, operation and decommissioning.

      Even something like solar PV wouldn't be very green unless they returned enough of the energy to the grid to make up for the manufacturing and disposal.

    • ...and say nothing of the carbon it takes to build a facility the size of 4 football fields, and then to stuff it with electronics and air conditioning. Your electricity might be carbon-free, but the operation is a long way from such.

      I haven't done the maths, but I suspect that even if they spent every last drop of profit on carbon capture/offset schemes, they still wouldn't "break even" carbon-wise.

    • Bitcoin is effectively a space heater consuming more power than Poland.

      You are literally correct in that it is heating space, not the Earth. Simply generating heat does not have any measureable impact on the climate except very locally to the heat source because the local increase in temperature increases the rate at which energy is radiated into space. The reason why carbon-based fuels cause heating is not because of the heat from the fuel but because the CO2 gas produced is very effective at absorbing radiated heat energy and hence trapping it in the atmosphere causing it t

      • by larwe ( 858929 )
        In the case of nuclear power, that heat is being generated anyway, though not necessarily at the same rate. Isotopes gonna isotope, though they'll do it much faster if refined and confined and reactin'. However, it bears pointing out that waste heat from NPPs does have a significant effect on animals that live in the water, waste heat emissions are certainly not environmentally neutral.
    • And conversely, any use of a clean power source for Bitcoin displaces other uses for that power.

    • by eth1 ( 94901 )

      How green/sustainable your power source is becomes irrelevant when you're turning 170 TWh into pure heat. Bitcoin is effectively a space heater consuming more power than Poland.

      I actually commented half tongue-in-cheek a few weeks ago that nuclear plants would end up with crypto mines built next to them.

      Why? Because it solves one of their biggest issues, which is load following. If you build a 500MW mining facility at the plant, you basically have a 500MW load-following margin that can be shed faster than a load-following plant can spin up, AND it generates revenue on the side instead of being an expensive idling power plant when you don't need it.

      • You know believe it or not some of the older nuclear plants were actually built to load follow, I know of at least one still in operation. Back at the dawn of nuclear power it was assumed that within a few decades the whole grid would be nuclear, and thus they'd have to have following nuclear resource. I hadn't realized this till a few years ago when I made a comment to a friend about load following and he told me the nuclear plant he worked on actually theoretically had the capability. I also know a cou

  • So, they will mine only during off-peak demand times? Where is the outrage over this misuse of resources?

    • by stooo ( 2202012 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @08:19AM (#61836959) Homepage

      Yeah no. that's just marketing BS.
      They will mine at all times without consideration fr the rest of the planet, as any miner ever did.

      • Yup, the goal is to make money, no matter what. This isn't even libertarian, because libertarians do believe that you should not harm your neighbors and that regulations and governments are necessary for that purpose. Instead here it's anarchy, do what ever you want, and if someone tries to stop you, go somewhere else. Not enough profits, cut workers, legal workers refuse the low pay, then get undocumented workers, a promise you made gets in the way of profits then break the promise. This is old style c

    • by Pinky's Brain ( 1158667 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @08:22AM (#61836975)

      Those mining ASICs age, running them less than 24/7 eats into profits.

      • And when they do they're thrown in the trash. There's millions of pounds of E-Waste coming from those ASICs. Not to mention all the waste that comes from manufacturing them. It'll wind up in landfills in poor countries and contaminate groundwater and give people cancers.
  • Just Wow (Score:4, Interesting)

    by rmdingler ( 1955220 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @08:01AM (#61836911) Journal

    Bitcoin is worth enough traditional, fiat dinero, that it is saving dying waste coal and gas plants.

    Four years ago, the Scrubgrass power plant in Venango County, Pennsylvania, was on the brink of financial ruin as energy customers preferred to buy cheap natural gas or renewables. Then Scrubgrass pivoted to Bitcoin.

    Today, through a holding company based in Kennerdell, Pennsylvania, called Stronghold Digital Mining that bought the plant, Scrubgrass burns enough coal waste to power about 1,800 cryptocurrency mining computers.

    This is not what nuclear energy was supposed to save us from.

    • Re:Just Wow (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Ritz_Just_Ritz ( 883997 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @08:07AM (#61836927)

      Indeed. Now that China has banned cryptocurrency use, I would expect that another 1 or 2 major economies doing the same will put a stake in the heart of this utter waste of resources.

      • Re:Just Wow (Score:4, Insightful)

        by GameboyRMH ( 1153867 ) <`gameboyrmh' `at' `gmail.com'> on Monday September 27, 2021 @08:57AM (#61837095) Journal

        This. Major Western powers need to take synchronized action right away to quickly de-escalate the situation, without it less scrupulous actors will quickly pick up where China left off. The US, Germany and Canada now have governments that should be willing to move on this.

      • Only a tyranny will assert the authority to ban cryptocurrency. A free nation with a free economy means people are free to make bad decisions. That doesn't mean a democratic nation is powerless to get people to make the "correct" decisions. A government could set an example by making lowering CO2 emissions a priority in the products and services it buys from private industry. Governments buy a lot of stuff, and they consume a lot of energy, which means they have considerable influence on the market.

        One

        • Only a tyranny will assert the authority to ban cryptocurrency.

          Banning cryptocurrency is not something that can be done in a free nation.

          I'm actually pretty sure the US government explicitly has the power to ban (or tax to the point of effectively banning) cryptocurrency (or any currency), a power delegated directly in the constitution. There's actually a crapton of case law on this going back hundreds of years in the US, partly because states used to print their own currencies, and also because there was good reason to be cautious about the circulation of foreign currencies in the era the US was founded (you know, the whole revolted colony

  • It's just sitting there unused after shutting down last year.
  • by leathered ( 780018 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @08:19AM (#61836957)

    Well that's a lie. Bitcoin miners want nothing but cheap energy, and would burn down orphanages if it saved them a buck.

    • by necro81 ( 917438 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @08:36AM (#61837025) Journal

      would burn down orphanages if it saved them a buck.

      Just what is the energy output of a burning orphanage? Asking for a friend.

      • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @11:07AM (#61837543)

        A typical human adult can give off about 150kWh of energy as per a study of waste energy recovery from crematoriums. We can assume a typical orphan will give off 50kWh. With around 450000 children in foster care in the USA we could generate 22.5GWh of energy.

        Currently completing a bitcoin transaction and committing it to the blockchain consumes 1.82MWh of energy (yeah I was surprised when I looked this up). So burning all orphans in the USA alone would be able to complete 12360 Bitcoin transactions.

        Or to put it another way, we have to burn a full orphanage of 36 orphans for every transaction.

        This of course assumes we don't want to burn down the building. The building may generate more heat, but we'll need it to attract homeless people once we run out of orphans.

  • wat (Score:3, Insightful)

    by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday September 27, 2021 @08:22AM (#61836977) Homepage Journal

    "Both industry's challenges are the other industry's positives," said Sean Lawrie, partner at consulting firm ScottMadden Inc....

    So shitcoin somehow helps deal with the nuclear waste problem? It somehow makes nuclear cheaper than other forms of energy? The whole fucking concept is so far beyond stupid that I literally want this fuckface shot out of a cannon and into the sun, stat.

    The synergy he's talking about is that nuclear can't be ramped up and down conveniently, so you either have to run other plants to fill the load demand, or you have to overproduce energy and then you go looking for people who will take it because even providing it below cost means you lose less money. So presumably you could sell it to shitcoin miners, who will be happy to have the cheap power. And then you could claim eco-friendliness, except for the fact that this is pure fucking garbage.

    Why's it horse shit? Two big reasons. First, if you have ways to use excess power, that opens the door for renewables just as much as nuclear. You build excess capacity and then you mine bitcoins while the wind blows, or the sun shines or whatever. And it's STILL cheaper than nuclear even if you build an absolute shedload of excess. But the other reason is that there are lots of other things we could do with excess power which would not only not be harmful to the environment like wasting it on money laundering, but actually beneficial like carbon sequestration or avoiding needing to take as much water from aquifers by doing desalination.

    Nuclear power and bitcoin are two things we don't need, which frankly make no more sense together than they do apart.

    • If wind and solar are cheaper than nuclear power then why is it that after decades of government incentives for wind and solar power we see nuclear power plants provide 20% of the electricity in the USA while wind and solar produce what amounts to a rounding error?

      We know what has been holding back nuclear power for decades, it's been Democrat politicians tossing wrenches in the works since the Carter administration. Only in the last year or two are we seeing Democrats say nice things about nuclear power.

    • "So shitcoin somehow helps deal with the nuclear waste problem? It somehow makes nuclear cheaper than other forms of energy? "

      Shhh.. We are busy making the planet the biggest crapsack world possible so future generations will hate us and install portapotty shells over our graves.

  • by greatpatton ( 1242300 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @08:26AM (#61836989)
    Until 100% of the electricity is generated through zero CO2 power plant, all of this is going to be marking BS. All the electricity used by Bitcoin can be used for more useful things, and renewable capacity build for Bitcoin can be used to displace coal plant instead of heating GPU.
    • All the electricity used by Bitcoin can be used for more useful things, and renewable capacity build for Bitcoin can be used to displace coal plant instead of heating GPU.

      That assumes the energy would have been generated without the bitcoin miners funding it.

      Renewable capacity that isn't built can't be used to displace a coal plant.

  • Because it will be good to have on hand as a snack when this all collapses.

  • by linebackn ( 131821 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @09:10AM (#61837125)

    This is ridiculous. Where will it end? In 100,000 years, all stars will be drained of their energy, bringing on an early heat-death of the universe. All because some assholes wanted to "mine bitcoins".

  • by colonslash ( 544210 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @09:21AM (#61837153)
    So Bitcoin will keep some clean power sources online longer, and might even create demand for additional power plants, possibly even helping to drive research into better tech. Once all of the Bitcoin are mined, electricity is cheap and abundant for all?
    • Even after the last BTC is mined, you still need to mine transaction blocks, constantly, for the Bitcoin network to work. There's no endgame here.

      • The difficulty associated with mining bitcoin varies from time to time in order to keep the rate of new coin creation under control (avoid rapid creation of new coin). Without the financial incentive of mining new coin, I am sure that many miners will drop out, and the difficulty will go down. Then the power requirement will also go down. Only people interested in keeping the network running will then be mining bitcoin. So there probably is an endgame. At low difficulty, regular PC's can probably keep the n

    • Re:Endgame? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by swilver ( 617741 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @10:16AM (#61837321)

      Endgame is that more and more countries will ban cryptocurrencies as it is one of the easiest things they can do to be more green.

      • Endgame is that more and more countries will ban cryptocurrencies as it is one of the easiest things they can do to be more green.

        Ignoring my question about energy supply growth, is it [ledger.com]?

        The estimated global production costs of paper currency in 2014 were 5 terawatts per year and 10 billion liters of water. While the banking system alone is even consuming more energy than the Bitcoin network, bankings energy costs are calculated around 100 terawatts per year. This is almost double that of Bitcoin. Indeed, banks need to run a lot of servers, branches and ATMs to keep their system accessible to the public.

  • Because nuclear power has no environmental concerns at all. Noo, siree... XD

    But the entire Bitcoin "mining" thing is already completely alien to us. And I mean in the literal "you must be from a different planet if you think this is a good idea" sense. Namely, from planet Ferengon's little-known second moon called "Moron" where they put all the Ferengi that *the Ferengi* think are too greedy. ;)

  • by RobinH ( 124750 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @11:26AM (#61837611) Homepage

    Let's imagine we didn't have any money (John Lennon would be happy).

    Now imagine you're a... chicken farmer, and I did some work for you... maybe I repaired your barn. OK, so you need to compensate me, but there's no money, so you agreed to give me 3 chickens in exchange for my work.

    The thing is, I don't need 3 chickens, at least not right now. So you agree to give me 3 chickens in the future, whenever I need them. I agree to this, but I'd like it in writing, so you whip out a pen and paper to write me a note promising to give me 3 chickens (we'd call that an I.O.U.).

    Thinking ahead, I stop you and say, can you just fill out 3 pieces of paper each saying you promise to give me one chicken? "Sure," you say. Ok, can you word it like this? "I (the undersigned chicken farmer) agree to provide one chicken to whosoever presents this note to me."

    ...and you hand over 3 slips of paper to me. I take those pieces of paper into town, and I say to the butcher, "how much for one of those roast hams?" "That'll cost you one chicken!" "Cool!" So I hand him a slip of paper.

    Now we have money. In particular, make sure to understand that the paper represents debt. The farmer owes 3 chickens. The debt is used as currency and it has value so long as the farmer either (a) has chickens or (b) is presumed to have chickens in the future. By the way, when a company ships a product to another company, they send the customer an invoice (due in X days), and the amount owing (in whatever national currency) is counted as an asset to the vendor company. They can then sell that debt, to a collection agency, so it's a little similar.

    How do you get from there (let's assume logically that's how a gold-backed currency works) to a fiat currency?

    Well, you start with a gold (or chicken) backed currency, and once everyone is using it, you pass a law that says everyone has to pay X% of income per year to the government as taxes. As long as people are earning money (which they have to do to live) then they owe taxes, and since you have to pay taxes or go to jail, then the currency has value beyond what it's worth in chickens. The value is tied to the ability of the government to force people to pay taxes. Then you can get rid of whatever backed the currency because the fact that people have debt that must be paid in that currency is what gives it value.

    Bitcoin starts with no intrinsic value. If anything it has negative intrinsic value because I have to do a bunch of work to maintain my digital wallet, make sure the keys are safe, etc., and I can't be guaranteed to swap it for something I need because unlike the US dollar, there's a very real possibility it'll be worth nothing in the near future.

    In reality most of my net worth is tied up in non-monetary instruments, like shares of companies, a house, and a car, and chickens, and the like. I compare the value of those things in dollars for convenience, but they have intrinsic value to me.

    The only value of a dollar to me is that other people need it, and the value stays reasonably constant over time. Bitcoin doesn't have either of those things going for it.

    People once went berserk over tulip bulbs. And beanie babies. Bitcoin is mania. It will end the same way. And in the mean time we'll burn up a bunch of coal and uranium to "mine" more of it. That sounds dumb to me.

    Now at first I thought NFTs were just as dumb... but there's nothing stopping a chicken farmer from making an NFT that entitles the owner of the NFT to exchange it, in the future, for a chicken. So maybe NFTs could have a future?

    • Now at first I thought NFTs were just as dumb... but there's nothing stopping a chicken farmer from making an NFT that entitles the owner of the NFT to exchange it, in the future, for a chicken. So maybe NFTs could have a future?

      There's nothing stopping a chicken farmer from making 10,000 NFTs that entitles the owner of the NFT to exchange it for the same chicken.

      Much like Bitcoin et al, NFT scarcity is entirely artificial.

      • by RobinH ( 124750 )
        True, but nothing says the chicken farmer has any chickens available when they write out the 3 notes either. The value is in whether you believe the farmer will have chickens in the future. In some ways it's no different than a company selling shares to raise capital. There's still a person who can be taken to court and made to provide a settlement of their debt. Banks are only required to hold cash in the value of 5% of the amount on deposit. We all believe the bank will give us cash when we go and as
        • True, but nothing says the chicken farmer has any chickens available when they write out the 3 notes either. The value is in whether you believe the farmer will have chickens in the future.

          It's even worse than that: the value of what you would pay for such a NFT is entirely on the eyes of the beholder. This is not a check, a legal binding contract or even a fancy IOU: you're literally just buying a non-fungible token with some data on it. The fact that it states "valid for one healthy chicken" is, well, irrelevant really.

          In some ways it's no different than a company selling shares to raise capital. There's still a person who can be taken to court and made to provide a settlement of their debt.

          Oh, it is very different. An investment is not a purchase.

          Banks are only required to hold cash in the value of 5% of the amount on deposit. We all believe the bank will give us cash when we go and ask for it. :)

          For a reason - banks make your money earn interest (paltry as those may be), based on the expectation that their ent

  • Guess it's time to reset the "Days Since Last Crypto Currency Article" back to zero.
  • A number of posters have been flaming Bitcoin trading and mining as being pure waste. They're missing a point.

    Bitcoin is (still) valued and traded because it is perceived as being a better store of value than fiat currencies. The waste represented by miners' energy consumption is a drop in the ocean compared to the waste and theft of value perpetrated by governments by the inflation of their currencies.

    If you want to bring bitcoin energy waste to a screeching halt, try coming up with a better alternative

    • typo. Should have read:

      "... would both apply the Gold and Silver part of Article I, Section 10, Clause 1, TO THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT ..."

  • If all this power was used to summon Cthulhu instead, would that be better or worse for humanity than funneling it into the vacuum that is bitcoin?

  • They should use geothermal power: a secret facility in an old volcano is known to work well. Or at least put the nuclear reactor inside one. There they can mine One Hundred Million Billion Dollars of crypto.

    Sharks optional.

  • Using one of the most regulated industries in the world to power an industry trying to be one of the most unregulated...

  • Bitcoin's price in US dollars keep going up. More and more companies, and now even whole countries, adopt it.

    But interestingly, all of tech-loving Slashdot has decided a decentralized digital store of value (Bitcoin blockchain and efficient payment system (lightning network) has no value at all. What's going on here?

    Is all of Slashdot salty cause they missed the boat?

    (Bitcoin was launched with an article on Slashdot in july 2010. The price per coin was 8 cents! Ten dollars invested then would've been worth

  • Too late to save Bellefonte [wikipedia.org]?

  • Nuclear Shitcoin..shark has been jumped, series cancelled.

    Crypto or paper, it's all numbers in people's heads and we keep reaching ever more cartoonish levels in our behavior surrounding it.

      It's tiresome, it's old, and yes, this is more a rant than an observation.

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