A new contributor to the Bitcoin (BTC) energy debate says that 1 BTC would have to cost $20 million to use 100 times its current energy demands.
In a Twitter debate on July 18, Sjors Provoost, a Bitcoin developer and author of “Bitcoin: A Work in Progress,” cast doubt on the largest cryptocurrency’s future energy use.
How much energy Bitcoin uses to survive has become a topic of friction which has gone from within the industry to global government.
Throughout the process, Bitcoin proponents have complained that a combination of bias and lack of understanding of network principles are leading those in power to make incorrect conclusions about how and why Bitcoin uses the energy it does.
While critics argue that Bitcoin must reduce its energy consumption, others explain that Bitcoin in fact uses energy which would often otherwise be wasted or inaccessible.
Discussing the status quo, fellow developer Matt Odell published a graphic showing that Bitcoin mining currently only uses 0.49% of the world’s wasted electricity, and 0.16% of electricity overall.
Responding, Provoost calculated that for energy use to increase proportionally with changes in the Bitcoin network’s preprogrammed changes, it would have to become an “absurd” $420 trillion entity.
“In 10 years the block subsidy will be ~10x lower (3 halvings). In order to get 100x today's energy use, Bitcoin would have to trade at $20M by then (plus energy cost inflation adjustment),” he wrote.
Bitcoin’s halving cycles mean that the block subsidy — the amount of “new” BTC added to the supply per mined block — halves roughly every four years. Each time, the mining ecosystem competes for less BTC, and thanks to Bitcoin’s Proof-of-Work (PoW) mining algorithm, remains incentivized to do
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