As the global Climate Crisis gathers pace, Bitcoin miners are increasing their consumption of power, adding to the problems. The team at BestBrokers has calculated the average yearly power consumption for Bitcoin mining in each country, ranking the biggest consumers of power to mine coins as of May 2024.
Following the recent halving of the Bitcoin block reward from 6.25 to 3.125 bitcoin, the electricity required to produce just 1 bitcoin doubled to a staggering 854,403.71 kWh, given the current Hashrate and mining hardware specifications.
BestBrokers also checked the cost of this power consumption at each country's local average business electricity rate per kWh as of April/May 2024 for the ten largest BTC mining nations.
Unsurprisingly, the US consumes the most power mining bitcoins, gobbling up 145.6 GWh and accounting for well over a third (37.9%) of the global power consumption. China comes in second with 81.2 GWh (21.1%) and surprisingly Kazakhstan is third with 50.9 GWh (13.2%). Together just these three countries account for just under three quarters (72%) of all the power consumed in the world used to mine bitcoins.
The main conclusions from the report included:
More detailed information can be found in the full report, which also includes the full data and methodology used in these calculations. Feel free to use any data or graphics by providing a proper attribution link to the original report.
Daily power consumption mining bitcoin by country GWh
Electricity consumption of bitcoin mining and its cost in 2024