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The head of Ripple SBI Asia asserts that hashpower is migrating from east to west, however, notes that significant tensions remain between Chinese and U.S. mining firms.
Speaking to Cointelegraph, the CEO of Ripple SBI Asia, Adam Traidman, predicted that the mining industry will continue to see hash rate migrate from east to west, asserting that he is already witnessing the transition begin.
âWe are seeing a huge interest [from][ wealthy Chinese miners who are paying somewhere on average of $0.03 to $0.05 per kilowatt-hour [...] in Texas at $0.025 and below â in some cases way below,â Traidman stated.
Tensions between American and Chinese miners
However, the Ripple SBI Asia head noted that relations between mining firms in Texas and China have been soured in the past, stating:
âOne of the issues is that the good old boys in Texas in some cases have a little bit of a bad taste in their mouth about working with some of the firms from overseas, based on some early attempts that didnât work out well for a variety of business reasons. So there is a little bit of trepidation there, which is interesting. But money overcomes all of that, and I think over the next three years, youâre going to see a huge influx into the U.Sâ
Traidman also highlighted the impact that Trumpâs tariffs targeting China have had on talks between Chinese and U.S. mining companies:
âThe one other thing that is slowing it down is the tariffs from Trump on China. That is really hurting things right now, so as soon as those are lifted, itâll be like this âboomâ - a huge acceleration,â he said.
Despite emphasizing the coming migration of hash rate from east to west, Traidman noted that as of right now, âmost of the big mining hardware providers [...] over 90% of their customer shipments are still in China.â
Europe getting pushed out of industrial mining
While noting that Europe previously attracted many of the mining industryâs top players, Traidman stated that high operating costs since have deterred miners from much of the region.
âThe U.S., it turns out, with the oil reserves and coal and everything and wind power and Texas and stuff, tons of excess energy, you would think Europe may be more akin to the U.S. like that. But for whatever reason, the power prices there are just higher.â
Traidman suggests that Europeâs inflated operating costs may be the result of an intentional strategy to limit the sectorâs presence in the region, highlighting that many jurisdictions may not want âthese super inefficient, power-hungry, potentially non-eco-friendly businesses in [their] backyard.â
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