Bitcoin mining recovers as Kazakhstan is back online, but at what cost?

TL;DR Breakdown

  • Major Bitcion mining pools have recovered almost 9% as internet is restored in Kazakhstan.
  • There are growing allegations of human rights violation and social media outrage against the government. 
  • Crypto miners are looking beyond Kazakhstan for a more sustainable solution to mining. 

The ongoing Kazakhstan protest has been hurting the Bitcoin mining industry for almost a week now. Bitcoin prices plunged below $45k for the first time in months on January 6th, after the Kazakh government announced a nationwide internet shutdown. 

Kazakhstan is the second biggest Bitcion mining hub in the world, only trailing the US. So, when the whole country was offline,  the hashrate of all major Bitcion mining pools fell by 11%. This was a major disruption of the BTC supply chain because over 18% of global Bitcoin miners are in Kazakhstan. The country became a major hub for crypto mining after China’s ban. 

Since yesterday, the country’s internet has been partially restored and all mining stations are now online. Although internet connection remains limited in Almaty, the country’s capital, all other Bitcion mining regions are fully up and running. The hashrate across all major mining pools have recovered almost 9% today, and BTC supply might be back to its usual capacity within the next 24 hours. 

Bitcoin mining recovers as Kazakhstan is back online, but at what cost? 1
BTC mining hashrate curve over 2 months

A cloud of humanitarian concerns in Kazakhstan 

As much as we’d like, sometimes it’s impossible to separate crypto from politics. Fundamentally, crypto is a decentralized digital asset, but the market is hugely influenced by everything that happens within the centralized institutes. 

Although Bitcion mining is finally online, there are several claims of forceful violence against the Kazakh citizens for the past week. Almost 8,000 people have been detained and over 150 have died in the ongoing protest against rising fuel prices. Social media is filled with outrage from communities, blaming the Kazakhstan government and the Russian troops for violently cracking down on innocent protesters.