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Purpose Investments will measure the carbon footprint associated with its portfolio and purchase carbon offsets accordingly.
Two carbon neutral cryptocurrency-backed exchange-traded funds are poised to launch in Canada offering a greener alternative for institutional investors.
Canada-based asset manager Purpose Investments is readying to launch two new crypto-based ETFs on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Nov. 9, both of which offer investors a carbon offset.
Purpose will launch their Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs under the BTCC.J and ETHH.J tickers. Unlike the funds recently launched in the U.S. which are futures contract backed, these funds will be backed and settled using BTC as the underlying asset.
Tomorrow @PurposeInvest is launching new share classes for their #Bitcoin and #Ethereum ETFs -- $BTCC and $ETHH. They will be "Carbon Offset" share classes and will be denoted "/J". Pages below. pic.twitter.com/W9QYS4232U
— James Seyffart (@JSeyff) November 8, 2021
The Toronto-based firm has partnered with Patch, a firm that will help it measure the carbon footprint of the crypto portfolios and offer carbon-removal solutions. Measuring the carbon footprint of crypto mining is no easy task as there are so many variables, but the firm has detailed its efforts and the math in a whitepaper.
Purpose will then invest in vetted carbon offsetting projects with the aim to give clients carbon neutral exposure to BTC. Some of the projects it will invest in include direct air capture, biomass, mineralization or carbon dioxide removal, forestry, ocean fertilization, and soil management.
According to the firm's prospectus,Purpose's new BTC fund held 24,167 BTC (approx. $US1.6 billion) as of Nov. 8, while the Ether fund had 86,906 ETH (worth roughly $US417 million) as of Nov. 8.
Related: Green Bitcoin: The impact and importance of energy use for PoW
The Purpose Bitcoin ETF (BTCC-B.TO) was North America’s first Bitcoin fund launched in February. It currently has more than a million dollars in volume and has returned almost 20% over the past month according to Yahoo! Finance.
The Purpose Ethereum ETF (ETHH.TO) is not as popular with just $210,000 in daily volume but it has made a better return of 38% over the past 30 days.
The company also launched the first ETF that incorporates carbon offsetting in Europe in June. The fund trades on the London Stock Exchange under the ticker ZERO and tracks the S&P Global Clean Energy Select Index.
However energy consumption has not matched the 170X price increase over the same period.
The Bitcoin energy consumption debate is heating up faster than the planet, with corporations facing pushback from the public and shareholders over Bitcoin investments.
According to a Citigroup Inc. report, Bitcoin is consuming 66 times more electricity than it did in 2015. It added that the carbon emissions associated with mining will likely face increasing scrutiny, according to Bloomberg.
This assertion is backed up by new research from Mastercard — which just released its own Carbon Calculator — that shows 54 percent of people believe that preserving the environment is more important now than it was pre-COVID-19.
Citigroup analysts also stated that:
“As the value of Bitcoin rises, so should its energy consumption.”
However, the network’s electricity usage is rising much more slowly than the price, which has risen by approximately 170 times over the same period.
The Citigroup report, citing numbers from the Cambridge University Center for Alternative Finance, stated that the global power demand by the Bitcoin network reached an annualized 143 terawatt-hours. This is about 4% higher than Argentina’s total electricity generation in 2019.
The Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index (CBECI) currently estimates Bitcoin’s annual electricity consumption is currently somewhere between that of Sweden and Malaysia at 141.6 TWh per year.
The report suggested that China may crack down on mining due to environmental concerns:
“Mining and use of these ‘coins’ is undoubtedly energy-intensive and could face greater regulatory scrutiny as adoption expands, especially if the U.S. continues to scale its crypto footprint and market-leader China cracks down on Bitcoin mining if it adversely impacts its climate goals,”
Bitcoin’s environmental impact has been fiercely debated with many arguments about it either refuted or at least shown to be much more complicated than opponents suggest. In late March, Coin Metrics co-founder Nic Carter produced a well-researched rebuttal to some of these key claims.
In it, he stated that there is an abundance of energy in the four Chinese provinces that the majority of BTC mining occurs, and much of it is derived from solar, wind, and hydropower. Additionally, the Chinese government actually curtails or sequesters power by removing excess energy from the grid or public consumption, often to maintain price levels.
To maintain profits, miners will generally use the cheapest power available. There is an annual migration to Sichuan province to take advantage of cheap hydroelectric power during the rainy season. Studies suggest that between 39% and 76% of Bitcoin mining uses renewable energy.