Cryptocurrency mining and environmentalism generally didn’t go hand in hand in conversations about the development of the blockchain industry, but a tweet from Tesla CEO Elon Musk was enough for the crypto community is starting to worry about what Bitcoin and Proof of Work miners are doing. to the planet.
A Forexsuggest survey studied several cryptocurrencies and measured their degree of pollution, calculating the estimated carbon emissions and the amount of resources that would be needed to counter their effects.
As they explain in the report, they took data from Statista, Business Insider India, Laptop Mag and other sources. When compiling, they calculated the carbon emissions and the growth rate of those emissions.
Bitcoin, Ethereum and Bitcoin Cash: the worst cryptocurrencies for the environment
As expected, Bitcoin and Ethereum are the two most polluting networks on the planet. They also concentrate the most hash power.
In 2021 alone, Bitcoin emitted around 56.8 million tonnes of CO2, more than two and a half times more than Etherum. The environmental impact is such that, according to the company’s estimates, it would take around 284.1 million trees to neutralize all the polluting gases emitted by BTC miners.
Ethereum, for its part, is much less polluting, but its performance is far from healthy: Ethereum miners have generated 22 million tons of CO2 so far this year, requiring nearly 110 million new trees to counter its effects.
For its part, Bitcoin Cash, a Bitcoin fork born in 2017 with the aim of mining larger blocks (resulting in an even more polluting network), ranks third on the list with only 1.5 million tonnes of CO2. . However, it is the network with the highest growth in emissions year over year, increasing the amount of polluting gases by 748%.
Study finds Bitcoin mining reduced pollution levels by 5%, likely after miners moved away from China and its thermoelectric power, to countries with power sources greener, like the United States.
The most environmentally friendly cryptocurrencies in 2021
But the cryptocurrency industry also has its green alternatives. Although unfortunately, these are less popular tokens compared to the more energy intensive cryptocurrencies.
The third place of this prestigious list is occupied by Nano. This cryptocurrency does not use mining and is not based on a blockchain but on block-lattice technology. Nano can process around 125 TPS requiring only 0.000112 kWh per transaction, which is minimal in terms of CO2 emissions.
The second most efficient coin is IOTA, another network that does not use blockchain but directed acyclic graph technology with a probabilistic consensus mechanism. It requires around 0.00011 kWh per transaction.
According to research, the most environmentally friendly cryptocurrency is Stellar, a competitor to Ripple that only requires 0.00003 kWh per transaction, which is barely a third of what IOTA needs.
Stellar needs 0.00072 oz of CO2 per transaction. Which is next to nothing compared to the 1,060.5 pounds of Bitcoin per transaction.
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