After three years, the University of Cambridge has implemented a major update to its Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index (CBECI) to more accurately assess the global energy footprint of Bitcoin miners.
The conclusion?
The previous power estimates were greatly overestimated.
βThe first and most noticeable discrepancy appears in 2021, where our previous CBECI model estimated an electricity consumption of 104 terawatt-hours (TWh), 15.0 TWh higher than the revised model estimate (89.0 TWh),β the reportΒ read.
A terawatt-hour (TWh) is a unit of energy equivalent to outputting one trillion watts for one hour. For context, if used for one hour per day, an average incandescent lightbulb consumes 21,900 watthours in a year.
The universityβs 2022 power estimate was also adjusted down by 9.8 TWh, from 105.3 TWh to 95.5 TWh, putting Bitcoinβs electricity consumption that year in roughly the same league as U.S. tumble dryers (108TWh).
The need for revision arose from the universityβs former methodology that every βprofitableβ hardware model released within the past five years βequally fueled the network hashrate.β
Though effective for most of Bitcoinβs lifespan, the methodology started exhibiting shortcomings in 2021 after Chinaβs mining ban.
βThis led to overestimating the number of older hardware and underestimating the proportion of newer hardware,β the reportβs author Alexander Neumueller told Decrypt.
ASIC hardware devices have become βconsiderably more efficientβ and powerful over time. ASICs are βApplication Specific Integrated Circuits,” machines specially designed to mine Bitcoin as efficiently as possible.
Given that the ban created a shortage in data center capacity, Cambridge said it is βreasonable to infer that mining operators would have already replaced all old machines with newer models.β
Cambridge model good, but not perfect
Shortcomings also emerged during βexceptionally profitable mining periods,β when the old hardware distribution estimates presented a βdisproportionally large number of older devices.β
With its new methodology, Cambridge incorporated recent hardware mining deliveries, though many βassumptions and simplificationsβ still applied.
Nevertheless, the reportβs findings reinforce those from a Coin Metrics study in June, which used the blockchain-based fingerprints left behind by mining machines to determine which hardware was dominating the network.
Though the reportβs findings were not incorporated into Cambridgeβs new methodology, Neumueller said that he holds the Coin Metrics authorsβ work in βhigh regard.β
Karim Helmyβlead author of the Coin Metrics reportβtold Decrypt that he was glad to see Cambridgeβs updated figures taking public company hardware data into account.
However, he believes its figures are still inaccurate.
βThe new methodology continues to overestimate energy consumption in bull markets,β he said.
For example, Cambridge estimated a βconsiderable increase in energy consumption per terahashβ between 2020 and 2021 which βis unlikely to have actually occurred in practice.β
Cambridgeβs findings were also supported by CH4 Capital founder Daniel Batten, whose fund invests in companies using Bitcoin mining to clean up the environment.
His model estimates Bitcoinβs current power demand to be 13.095 GW, versus Cambridgeβs 12.89 GW estimate. This figure presents the power it takes for all active mining devices to function.
In 2023, Cambridge estimates that the Bitcoin network has consumed 70.4 TWh of energyβso far.