For the First Time, a US City Has Banned Cryptocurrency Mining (businessinsider.com)
CaptainDork writes: The city of Plattsburgh, New York is imposing an 18-month moratorium on commercial cryptocurrency mining. The official reasoning for the moratorium is to "protect and enhance the City's natural, historic, cultural and electrical resources." Plattsburgh residents have seen skyrocketing electrical bills -- as much as $100 to $200 increases -- as a result of commercial cryptomining operations that mine for cryptocurrencies like bitcoin, according to Plattsburgh Mayor Colin Read, who spoke with Motherboard. The city is taking action to protect its citizens from those rising electrical bills that the city of Plattsburgh says is caused by cryptomining operations.
It turns out that commercial cryptocurrency mining operations used up so much electricity that the city of Plattsburgh exceeded its allotted monthly budget of electricity. One single cryptocurrency mining operation called Coinmint used up around 10% of the city's allotted power supply alone in January and February, according to Motherboard. When its electrical budget was exceeded in January, the city had to buy electricity from the open market at a higher cost, which was distributed among its residents.
It turns out that commercial cryptocurrency mining operations used up so much electricity that the city of Plattsburgh exceeded its allotted monthly budget of electricity. One single cryptocurrency mining operation called Coinmint used up around 10% of the city's allotted power supply alone in January and February, according to Motherboard. When its electrical budget was exceeded in January, the city had to buy electricity from the open market at a higher cost, which was distributed among its residents.
It's about damn time we start putting an end to this idiocy.
Is the most interesting part!
Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
That only people with free or stolen electricty will be able to compete. We already see it with malware miners stealing peoples resources. I expect most electric companies will have mining restrictions in a few years, giving rise to “electricity neutrality” debates.
The city doesn't need to ban currency mining. They need to fix their electricity tariff (rates).
If currency miners find that it's economical to spend electricity like this, it means that the city is not charging commercial / residential customers the appropriate amounts when they exceed reasonable usage levels. They need to fix that. It probably means that a bunch of other things about their electricity and water and government services are priced incorrectly / being abused as well.
What can you do? All these local/town governments were set up with rules dating from 50 years ago, and they've never changed or adapted since.
This isn't my fault. I only use Bitcoin from green sources.
*Police bust through the door*
FREEZE! YOU ARE ALL UNDER ARREST FOR MINin....
*sees monster MJ grow op with lights and plants everywhere*
Oh, never mind, carry on then. We thought you had computers usin' all that 'lectricity.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
You rent out some space in a cheap electrical area when the rates rise you move it elsewhere.
No sir I dont like it.
Constantly moving to evade capture and the resulting downtime must be factored into your cost of operating. At some point it no longer becomes profitable.
Their negotiations failed to account for demand... If anything, the presence of cryptocurrency mining operations increased usage and thus increased their bulk negotiation position.
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Electric vehicles reduce the use of other resources in exchange for increased use of electricity. Bitcoin mining has no such positive externality.
The story says that a single miner consumed 10% of a region's entire electricity alotment. A single electric vehicle is not going to do that.
Constantly moving to evade capture and the resulting downtime must be factored into your cost of operating. At some point it no longer becomes profitable.
A trailer rig full of mining computers that you can quickly hook to a commercial power outlet should do nicely and keep costs of relocation way down.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
If the US didn't learn from the Great Depression that a regulated economy is necessary to avoid misapplication of resources and improper allocation of financial responsibility, then we are all fucked (globally)
I'm very confident that we learned little. We're still pushing 100 year old ideas of laissez-faire capitalism, supply-side economics, and trickle-down economics. Even in the 19th century the ideas of trickle-down were well known enough to be controversial in its day.
"That's what happens when the Republicans take over—not only Nixon, but any of them. They simply don't know how to manage the economy. They're so busy operating the trickle-down theory, giving the richest corporations the biggest break, that the whole thing goes to hell in a handbasket." -- President Lyndon B. Johnson
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
No laws required. If you just charge them more for the electricity than the value of the cryptocurrency that can be mined with that electricity, all but the most stupid will stop doing it! I still don't understand why they don't set up commercial operations here in the Northwest, where we have the cheapest electric rates in the country due to proximity to Bonneville Dam.
I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
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The ONLY solution they should be considering is properly pricing energy.
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... just what this coin mining is supposed to be DOING? Is it dedicating massive amounts of computing power to solving scientific problems that require more computing power than is otherwise available?
Or is it just a bunch of computer science geeks figuring out how to make computers play with themselves?
I live in California, so this may not apply to their situation. Here we have certain 'tiers' of use, and the price increases as you use more. My first 100kwh might cost 15 cents/kwh, but above that, the price rises to 20 cents/kwh for the next 100kwh, and so forth. I think a better solution for this city would be to incorporate something like this, because I'm not sure how you 'ban' a crypotocurrency company, since it's just computers running in a building somewhere. It would be difficult to enforce.
How to you negotiate a position based on a demand premise that may or may not exist next week, much less next year?
By the authority of the people who elected their local leaders.
Why ban crypto currency alone? That is discrimination.
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
Cars are extremely useful, cryptocurrencies provide nothing of value to the economy. Cars charge mostly at night when other use is low, mining rigs usually run all day. It's not hard to see the difference in value.
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This is a government supplied solution so the power was being sold at 2 cents when the cost is closer to 10 cents nationally. In a proper free market system the price would have gone up and it wouldn't have been cost effective to mine crypto currency here..
What you see is free market at work. Selling power to large steady-load entities at $.02/kwh is a common and very profitable practice for utilities.
A large factory that runs 24/7 with a steady load allows the utility to operate their base-load plants at steady state, so a hydro, or nuke plant that has near zero incremental cost for increased load just runs and prints money. It also works almost as well for keeping coal plants running efficiently.
They charge residential users more because those customers cost more and have spastic loads.
Alternatively if it was still cost effective due to the lower costs of operating power plants in the region more power would get produced from newer plants that would get built.
That may not be reality- because the investors in said plants don't see a long term enterprise so they'd end up with a glut of electricity and no customers. However that just means the electricity bills would rise to a point of the national average probably. At that point it's not cost effective to mine. I don't see the problem other than that this city implements socialism rather than leaving it to a free market.
The way most utilities deal with this is in the contract they have with the user. To get the lowest rate, you must agree to some form of real-time pricing. .02/kwh normally, but when summer afternoon loads shoot upward, the utility may have to buy outside their system, but everyone in the region has the same problem.
In the southern USA, a factory may be paying
I've seen prices go over $35.00/kwh for power we had to buy from other utilities during extreme summers.
So the real-time contract passes the price to the large customers. They usually either shutdown, reduce usage, or some have their own generation that costs like $1-2/kwh, or their own management/engineers make decisions such as "it's only for a couple of hours, bite-the-bullet, keep production going".
It appears to me that this is really where Plattsville screwed up - they should, but apparently did not, require RTP pricing contracts for their large commercial users.
except they are subsidizing commercial operators, like these two bitcoin operations. with the expectation that they would have brought jobs, which can then be taxed to recover that subsidy and provide additional revenue to the city.
So basically they are selling the power to the bitcoin miners either at cost or maybe even at a loss with the expectation of getting jobs. But bitcoin mining doesn't really produce any jobs.
did the city screw up? yes, and they realized they messed up, thus they are just stopping more crypto miners from moving in until they can figure out how to fix it.
Bitcoin mining has no such positive externality.
Let the market decide. This is not a communist state.
Some suggest that the only way to keep them out is to build a (fire)wall.
The market was the entire point of Marxist economics and Lenin's strategy. So letting the market decide IS a communist state.
It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
Ummm, no. Capitalism is not the best of the alternatives. I doubt many on Slashdot know of any alternatives. (Communism is not an alternative, it is a theory of control not currency. Barter is not an alternative, barter is simplified capitalism.)
You could have saved yourself a lot of trouble with a look at a dictionary. The definition of capitalism is that capital controls the means of production. It's not about the form of currency, it's about the form of control.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
Also, in a generation or two we will be able to use the cars themselves to provide power during short periods when demand exceeds supply. EVs will actually make the grid more stable.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
So commercial cryptominers don't pay their fair share? Why should rates rise for anyone else?
Oh right, everything is privatized so fuck the citizenry
Privatized does not mean what you appear to think it means. The utility is run by the city government.
The town gets a limited amount of cheap electricity from hydro power. That was enough for the people who lived in the town before the miners moved in. Once the miners came in all of the cheap electricity got sucked up and they had to buy the more expensive electricity on the market.
Blaming this on privatization is immature and infantile. Are you up for tenure at a college university?
They are not evading capture they are moving from one cheap power source to another when they raise rates. The problem with their power use was it meant the provider had to buy on the overpriced market vs meeting demand with local generation methods.
No sir I dont like it.
If their bulk negotiations allows them to buy power cheaper, then supplying it at cost to bitcoin miners as well as other users provides benefits to all those users.
Bitcoin miners still have to pay tax on the property which houses their mining equipment, it may not bring in as much tax revenue as a factory full of workers but it still provides benefits to the area.
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"If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it." --Reagan
Casteism