US lawmakers appeal directly to 4 mining firms, requesting info on energy consumption

Four members of the United States House of Representatives from the Energy and Commerce Committee have demanded answers from four major crypto mining firms in regards to the potential effects of their energy consumption on the environment.

In letters dated Wednesday to Core Scientific, Marathon Digital Holdings, Riot Blockchain, and Stronghold Digital Mining, U.S. lawmakers Frank Pallone, Bobby Rush, Diana DeGette, and Paul Tonko requested the companies provide information from 2021 including the energy consumption of their mining facilities, the source of that energy, what percentage came from renewable energy sources, and how often the firms curtailed operations. The four members of the House committee also inquired as to the average cost per megawatt hour the companies spent mining crypto at each of their respective facilities.

“Blockchain technology holds immense promise that may make our personal information more secure and economy more efficient,” said the lawmakers in a letter to Riot CEO Jason Les. “However, the energy consumption and hardware required to support PoW-based cryptocurrencies may, in some instances, produce severe externalities in the form of harmful emissions and excess electronic waste.”

The request followed U.S. President Joe Biden signing the Inflation Reduction Act into law on Tuesday, a bill considered by many experts to be the biggest legislation in the fight against climate change. The bill included incentives to support and grow green energy projects, including clean transportation and “climate-smart” manufacturing.

“Given the existential threat posed by the climate crisis, we are deeply concerned about efforts like [Proof-of-Work mining] that increase demand for fossil fuels, with the potential to put new strain on our energy grid.”

Related: Green and gold: The crypto projects saving the planet

Whether in discussion over its environmental or economic impact, cryptocurrency remains in the spotlight among many in government, both in the United States and abroad. In April, 23 U.S. lawmakers sent a letter to the Environmental Protection Agency, urging administrator Michael Regan to assess crypto mining firms potentially violating environmental statutes.

All Dutch and English crypto news!

Former Ethereum dev Virgil Griffith asks for resentencing in North Korea case

Griffith’s attorneys are asking for a sentence reduction from 63 months to 51 months or less. News Own this piece of crypto history Collect this article as NFT Join...

Gary Gensler’s resignation ‘troll’ post disappoints Crypto X

SEC’s Gary Gensler managed to excite, then rudely disappoint crypto fans with a "legendary and respectable troll thread.” News Own this piece of crypto history Collect this article...

Ernst & Young taps ZK-proofs on Ethereum to automate contracts

EY said it chose Ethereum instead of a private network as it is cheaper, more confidential and prevents a party from gaining a “strategic advantage”...

Solana price takes another tumble — Can SOL hold above $130?

Solana price is down 21% in a week, but on-chain and derivatives data highlights investors’ confidence that the network can overcome recent hurdles. Altcoin Watch Own this...

Beste exchanges

Koop je crypto bij Bitvavo