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Will the ESG FUD ever stop? As a Congressional subcommittee prepares to take a good look at Proof-Of-Work mining, âmore than 70â national, international, state and local organizations wrote a letter to the âCongressional leadership.â In it, they use old and unreliable data to get their point across. They completely ignore all of 2021âs research and progress on the matter, because it would invalidate their argument.
The question is, will Congress buy their poorly researched, alarmist letter? The ESG FUD hit PoW mining like a ton of bricks in 2021. It might be based on a poor understanding of the subject at hand, but the public in general definitely bought it. And they quote the bogus numbers that their authorities invented left and right on social media.Â
Related Reading | Despite Crackdown, Bitcoin Mining Is Still Alive And Well In China
Also, the whole argument completely ignores Bitcoinâs main virtue. The orange coin provides a framework and tools for the worldâs transition to a disinflationary system. Paraphrasing âThe Price Of Tomorrowâsâ author Jeff Booth, in the inflationary system that we live in, thereâs a clear incentive for consumption. If your moneyâs purchasing power decreases by the minute, everybody will logically buy, spend, and consume everything in sight. That is the real monster that the planetâs facing. And Bitcoin fixes it.Â
In any case, Bitcoinâs resident ESG FUD expert, Nic Carter, took it upon himself to reply to the ESG organizations that sent misinformation to Congress. Letâs see how each part did.
The ESG Organizations Make Their Point, Nic Carter Counterpoints
The ESG organizations come out swinging from the introduction on:Â
âWe, the more than 70 climate, economic, racial justice, business and local organizations, write to you today to urge Congress to take steps to mitigate the considerable contribution portions of the cryptocurrency markets are making to climate change and the resulting greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, environmental, and climate justice impacts it will have.â
And their accuracies start from the get-go, also:
âIn 2018, scientists writing in Nature warned that Bitcoinâs growth alone could singlehandedly push global emissions above 2 degrees Celsius within less than three decades.â
Those numbers are ridiculous. The study assumes a progression relative to the number of users of the network, and thatâs simply not how Bitcoin works. Even if the whole planet adopted the Bitcoin standard, the network would still produce one block every ten minutes. Energy consumption is not directly related to the number of users.
What did Nic Carter respond? That the claim is âfalse, based on a debunked paper with a completely erroneous model of bitcoin.â
2. bitcoin's energy consumption will 'only get worse over time'
most likely will trail off over time, after peaking in the next decade (see https://t.co/8x0koM6nR9 for actually rigorous projections)
â nic carter (@nic__carter) January 6, 2022
Right after that, the ESG organizations even throw Ethereum under the bus:
âThe Digiconomistâs Ethereum Energy Consumption Index estimates that the Ethereum blockchain will consume 71 terawatt-hours this year, nearly the same as the energy consumption of Colombia.â
Since the letter is about PoW mining, it makes sense. The Ethereum community seems to have completely ignored the letter, at least over at Twitter.Â
BTC price chart for 01/07/2021 on Bitstamp | Source: BTC/USD on TradingView.com
Bitcoin Incentivizes Green Energy Infrastructure
The ESG organizations continue their poorly-researched attack with:
âThe GHG emissions from this exorbitant and unnecessary energy consumption is staggering.â
Itâs not unnecessary at all. In fact, PoW mining is absolutely essential for a decentralized, permissionless system. And the energy consumption is directly proportional to the security of the network. Plus, it anchors it to the real world. Not to mention the fact that Bitcoin actually incentivizes and finances green energy infrastructure.
Then, the ESG crowd accuses Bitcoin of âexacerbatingâ the global chip shortage:
âIncreased demand for these machines are exacerbating a global shortage of semiconductors. A bipartisan bill by Senators Maggie Hassan and Joni Ernst has called for a report on how cryptocurrency mining operations are impacting semiconductor supply chains.â
With ease, Nic Carter counterattacks with: âBitcoin miners are not tier 1 clients, they donât compete with Apple/Qualcomm/NVIDIA for space; the shortage is due to money printing and the demand shock. See section on semis here.â
5. Atlas/ greenidge increased power prices in NY.
The Atlas mine brought back online a fallow coal plant (converted to natgas) which now provides energy to the grid (in addition to mining). That's energy supplied to the grid which wasn't being produced beforehand
â nic carter (@nic__carter) January 6, 2022
Texas Doesnât Know What Its Doing, The ESG Crowd Does
Then, the ESG researchers make wild, unbacked assumptions about Texas power:
âFollowing a crackdown on cryptocurrency miners in China, many miners are moving to Texas, due to its deregulated grid, taking away the power that Texans need.â
This completely ignores the fact that the state of Texas went to great lengths to attract those miners. And that, unlike the ESG organizations that signed the infamous letter, power companies in Texas regularly attend Bitcoin meetings. They are making an effort to understand the technology and the opportunities it brings to them. Also, as Carter puts it, âMajority of mining is in west texas where transmission bottlenecks mean prices routinely go negative. Huge overcapacity and limited demand for power outside of mining.â
Miners also participate in demand response, meaning they aren't online when the grid is overburdened. Their presence dramatically improves economics for renewables and does not compete with households during scarcity events.
â nic carter (@nic__carter) January 6, 2022
The state of Texas knows what itâs doing, they see Bitcoinâs future is bright. These ESG organizations think they know better, though:
âAdding more energy-guzzling crypto mining operations to Texas could exacerbate the sorts of blackouts the state already saw during the extreme cold in February â outages that reporting shows hit communities of color the hardest.â
Wow, playing the race card there. So low. And unrelated. Anyway, answering the claim that miners âcould exacerbateâ the February blackouts, Carter says. âMiners were/ would have been offline during this time, as we demonstrate here. They also help alleviate âblack startâ issues through primary frequency response.âÂ
9. Stronghold mining with coal waste is bad (implied)
The coal waste was going to oxidize naturally. It was going to combust anyway. This is an incentive to clean up a nasty site leeching into groundwater etc. Neutral from a CO2 perspective and ++ from an ecology view
â nic carter (@nic__carter) January 6, 2022
Three Other Prominent Bitcoinersâ Response
Are these direct responses to the ESG organizationsâ letter? Itâs not clear, but the authors published them in the same timeframe. The first one refers to SHA256, the set of cryptographic hash functions that Bitcoin uses. Nunchuk founder Hugo Nguyen said, âOnce you understand that SHA256 is close to being 100% efficient at what it does, youâd stop calling it a âwasteâ. In fact, 100% efficiency is the exact opposite of âwasteâ. Thereâs nothing else like it.â
Once you understand that SHA256 is close to being 100% efficient at what it does, youâd stop calling it a âwasteâ. In fact, 100% efficiency is the exact opposite of âwasteâ. Thereâs nothing else like it. https://t.co/SLuVrAPfU2
â Hugo Nguyen (@hugohanoi) January 7, 2022
For his part, Swan Bitcoinâs Brandon Quittem attacks the concept of energy consumption being inherently bad. âEnergy consumption is directly correlated with GDP. Want to help developing countries? Help them harness more energy. Interestingly, Bitcoin acts as a free market subsidy for energy investment.â
3/ Energy consumption is directly correlated with GDP.
Want to help developing countries? Help them harness more energy.
Interestingly, Bitcoin acts as a free market subsidy for energy investment.
Incentivizes developing otherwise uneconomical energy sources. pic.twitter.com/DJ6yYoz6WO
â Brandon Quittem (@Bquittem) January 6, 2022
And Krakenâs Dan Held states that âBitcoinâs energy consumption is not âwasteful.â Why? Because âIt is much more efficient than existing financial systems.â And weâre talking orders of magnitude, here. Not only that, âNo one has the moral authority to tell you what is a good or bad use of energy (ex: watching the Kardashians).â
1/ Bitcoinâs energy consumption is not âwasteful.â
â It is much more efficient than existing financial systemsâ No one has the moral authority to tell you what is a good or bad use of energy (ex: watching the Kardashians)
â Dan Held (@danheld) January 6, 2022
Do you know how much energy American households use for their Christmas lights? As much as the whole Bitcoin network, thatâs how much.Â
Related Reading | Is This The Reason China Banned Bitcoin Mining? Carvalhoâs Mind Blowing Theory
Where is the letter to Congress protesting Christmas lights, ESG organizations?
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