
The Bitcoin network hashrate has returned to 241.29 EH/s after a temporary 38% fall to 170.60 EH/s from a weekly peak of 276.40 EH/s.
Bitcoin’s network hashrate has returned to regular levels again, days after freezing temperatures across the United States put a strain on the nation's electricity grid — leading to a temporary drop in hashrate.
In the days leading up to Christmas, bone-chilling temperatures swept across the United States, leading to millions without power and claiming at least 28 lives.
According to reports, Bitcoin miners in Texas, which accounts for a significant portion of the country's hashrate, voluntarily curtailed operations to give power back to the grid — so that residents can keep their homes heated.
The disruptions appear to have put a dent in Bitcoin’s hashrate, which typically hovers around 225-300 Exahashes per second (EH/s). This fell to 170.60 EH/s on Dec. 25.
As of Dec. 26 however, the hashrate has returned to 241.29 EH/s, according to data from hashrate mining calculator CoinWarz.
Bitcoin’s hashrate is calculated by measuring the number of hashes produced by Bitcoin miners trying to solve the next block. It is regarded as a key metric in assessing how secure the Bitcoin network is.
The recent events prompted a controversial statement from FutureBit founder John Stefanop, who suggested the fall in hashrate was due to a number of “highly centralized mines” in Texas turning off at the same time.
“I know, does not change the fact that a few large mines in Texas affect the entire network to the tune of 33%...everyones transactions are now being confirmed 30% slower because the hashrate is not decentralized enough,” he said.
“If hashrate was distributed evenly around the world by 10’s of millions of small miners instead of a few dozen massive mines, this event would not have even registered on the network,” Stefanop added.
Bitcoin bull Dan Held however refuted Stefanop’s take on the events, arguing that weather patterns do not mean centralized ownership or control.
According to the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index, the United States accounts for 37.84% of the average monthly hashrate share. The top four states in the country for Bitcoin mining include New York, Kentucky, Georgia and Texas — all of which had experienced power outages due to the winter storm.
However, Dennis Porter, the CEO of Bitcoin mining advocacy group Satoshi Action Fund noted to his 127,400 Twitter followers on Dec. 25 that while the inclement weather, particularly in Texas, caused 30% of Bitcoin’s hashrate in the United States to go offline, the network “continues to work perfectly.”
Over 30% of the #Bitcoin hashrate has gone offline due to extreme weather in Texas and yet the global #Bitcoin network continues to work perfectly.
— Dennis Porter (@Dennis_Porter_) December 25, 2022
Now imagine if Amazon or Google tried turning off 1/3rd of their data centers. pic.twitter.com/G49iqBZXDL
Cheap power and favorable mining regulation in Texas has led to a Bitcoin mining boom in Texas in recent months, which is now host to some of the largest mining companies in the world.
Among those Riot Blockchain, Argo, Bitdeer, Argo, Compute North, Genesis Digital Assets and Core Scientific — who’ve recently received a $37.4 million bankruptcy loan to stay afloat.
Related: 'There's a lot less land to go around' — Why White Rock established off-the-grid mining in Texas
However recent weather events have only added to Bitcoin mining companies’ list of headaches.
The bear market has plagued Bitcoin mining companies to the tune of $4 billion in debt, according to recent data.
Many notable U.S. based mining companies have filed for bankruptcy in recent months too, while many other companies are approaching near-insurmountable debt-to-equity ratios that require immediate restructuring.
The tragic weather events haven’t impacted the price of Bitcoin (BTC) thus far, which is currently priced at $16,826 — only down 0.27 over the last 24 hours.
Genesis Digital Assets' new Bitcoin Texan mining center will have a capacity of 300 megawatts.
Major U.S.-based Bitcoin (BTC) mining firm Genesis Digital Assets is building a new data center in West Texas.
According to the firm’s Nov.1 announcement, the new industrial-scale BTC mining data center will have a capacity of 300 megawatts and will operate using unspecified “sustainable infrastructure.” Its energy will be sourced from the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT).
As part of the announcement, Genesis co-founder and executive chairman Abdumalik Mirakhmedov emphasized that “sustainability” is a key part of the firm’s plans for “rapid expansion.”
ERCOT supplies more than 26 million customers in Texas with electricity. As of April this year, 42% of its energy supply was sourced from wind and solar.
Genesis is one of the largest Bitcoin miners in the U.S., with the firm estimating it has mined more than $1 billion worth of BTC since its launch in 2013. As of October 2021, Genesis' data centers represented an operational capacity exceeding 170 megawatts or a total hash rate of 3.8 exahashes per second (EH/s).
The firm has outlined that another 9.4 EH/s will go “online during the next 12 months,” with the company aiming to surpass a total capacity of 1.4 gigawatts by the end of 2023. Genesis estimates it represented 2.4% of the Bitcoin network’s total hashing power during September.
Major U.S.-based Bitcoin (BTC) mining firm Genesis Digital Assets is building a new data center in West Texas.
Related:Bitcoin miner maker Canaan records highest quarterly profit since 2019 IPO
Genesis has raised a total of $556 million from two separate funding rounds in 2021 to fuel its aggressive plans for expansion.
In July, the firm announced a $125 million equity funding round, with some of the funds going towards a deal to purchase 20,000 Bitcoin miners from Canaan the following month. As part of the deal, Canaan also granted Genesis an opportunity to purchase up to 180,000 additional BTC mining machines.
In September, the firm secured $431 million to expand its U.S. and Norther European operations in a funding round led by Paradigm.
Genesis plans to more than triple its hashing capacity from 2.6 EH/s to 8.1 EH/s.
Genesis Digital Assets has become the latest Bitcoin mining firm to raise millions towards plans for aggressive expansion amid the exodus of miners from China due to its crackdown on the sector.
On July 28, Genesis announced it had closed a $125 million equity funding round led by U.K.-based Kingsway Capital. The capital will be mobilized to purchase mining hardware and launch new data centers in the United States and Nordic region.
The terms of the deal will also see Kingsway Capital CEO, Manuel Stotz, join Genesis’ board of directors. Stotz highlighted Genesis’ extensive experience in mining. “The GDA team has been building highly profitable large-scale Bitcoin mining farms for nearly eight years and the industry has only been around for twelve,” he said, adding:
“Bitcoin is going to be the most important technology for financial inclusion of the global poor and unbanked and mining provides security to make this possible.”
Genesis currently represents a total hashrate of 2.6 exahashes per second (EH/s), equal to more than 2.6% of global hashrate. The firm expects to increase its capacity by a further 5.5 exahashes by the end of 2023, targeting a data center capacity of more than one gigawatt.
Since launching in 2013, Genesis estimates it has mined more than $1 billion worth of Bitcoin.
Genesis is not alone in looking to raise to expand its operations amid China’s mining crackdown, with U.S. miner Stronghold filing for a $100 million Initial Public Offering (IPO) on July 27 to expand its operational hashrate by at roughly 75% from 3,000 petahashes per second (PH/s) to 5,300.
Related: Law professor calls for crypto mining regulation during US Senate hearing
On July 28, Chinese-based BIT Mining announced it had entered into an agreement to acquire 2,500 new mining machines worth $6.6 million for deployment in Kazakhstan, anticipating a hashrate increase of 165 PH/s.
Despite the aggressive moves from industrial-scale mining firms to scale their operations outside of China, Cointelegraph reported that hashrate has become increasingly decentralized over the past 12 months, with smaller firms increasing their share of global hashing power.
Cointelegraph also reported that Chinese hashrate had been steadily declining for more than one year leading up to the crackdown, with China’s hash power shrinking from 75.5% of the global total in September 2019 to 46% as of April 2021.