A hearing on crypto mining scheduled to take place in the US House of Representatives Committee on Energy & Commerce this week is already raising alarms in the crypto industry as a pre-published memo revealed what some called “basic errors” in lawmakers’ understanding of the field.
The hearing, titled Cleaning Up Cryptocurrency: The Energy Impacts of Blockchains, will focus on “the energy and environmental impacts” of crypto mining. Specifically, issues relating to proof-of-work (PoW) blockchains like Bitcoin (BTC) and, in its current state, Ethereum (ETH), which the memo said “requires enormous amounts of energy,” is expected to be addressed.
“One analysis indicates that the energy required to validate just one ETH transaction today could power a U.S. home for more than a week, while the energy required for a BTC transaction could power a home for more than 70 days,” the memo said in its introduction to the topic.
The memo went on to add that alternatives to PoW, such as proof-of-stake (PoS), exist, and that these technologies “demonstrate that exponential energy consumption is not necessary for cryptocurrencies to function.” (Learn more: 'Fiat-Like' Proof-of-Stake Chains Favor Centralization & Rich Players)
Commenting on the pre-published memo, Jake Chervinsky, a well-known lawyer in the crypto space and Head of Policy at the Blockchain Association, said it was “not all bad,” although he noted that it commits “basic errors,” including “repeating the fallacy of ‘per transaction’ carbon emissions.”
Meanwhile, Brian Brooks, CEO of major blockchain technology firm Bitfury and a former Comptroller of the Currency in the US, who will be present at the hearing, said that he plans to focus on what he called “the positive renewable
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