Crypto
Crypto Miners Fight Federal Agencies’ Demands To Reveal Energy Use
Lawyers representing a crypto trade group that includes one of the nationâs largest bitcoin mining companies have scored an interim victory in their scramble to stop the federal governmentâs attempt to collect data about their energy usage.
On Friday, a federal judge in Texas temporarily halted the governmentâs use of a mandatory survey, which would have forced companies to disclose how much electricity they use and from which suppliers, along with the computing capacity of the mining equipment.
The emergency hearing came just one day after the Texas Blockchain Council sued the Department of Energy and other federal agencies over the proposed survey. Now, the case is effectively halted for at least the next four weeks.
Earlier this month, the EIA concluded that every year, the crypto mining industry uses approximately â0.6% to 2.3% of U.S. electricity consumption.â
âThe increased demand associated with cryptocurrency mining can present challenges to the operation of electricity grids,â the agency also wrote.
Chris Higginbotham, a spokesperson for the Energy Information Administration, declined to comment on the case. The Department of Energy did not respond to Forbesâ request for comment.
âThis is a case about sloppy government process, contrived and self-inflicted
urgency, and invasive government data collection,â the Texas Blockchain Council wrote in their complaint.
According to one of the court filings, the administrator of the EIA decided to accelerate the survey due to bitcoinâs recent price increase and the higher demand for energy during winter months.
The cryptomining industryâs rising energy use has concerned many government officials at the local, state and federal levels in recent years.
In 2023, state lawmakers in Pennsylvania began new efforts to re-examine the industryâs effects on that stateâs environment.
Nearly two years ago, the White House put out a fact sheet about the impact of cryptocurrency mining, which noted: âDepending on the energy intensity of the technology and the sources of electricity used, the rapid growth of crypto-assets could potentially hinder broader efforts to achieve U.S. climate commitments to reach net-zero carbon pollution.â