China's crypto crackdown speeds shift to central Asia, North America mining
By Kathi on May 26, 2021 | 03:36 AM IST
A crackdown by Beijing is rapidly accelerating a shift in
focus by makers of machines that 'mine' cryptocurrencies like bitcoin from
China to North America and Central Asia as Chinese clients face an uncertain
future.
China's central government vowed to clamp down on bitcoin
mining and trading on Friday, causing some miners to halt all or part of their
operations in a country that accounts for more than half of the world's crypto
supply.
The makers of the equipment miners use, many of them
Chinese, say they are now looking elsewhere for growth.
Hangzhou-based Ebang International said that its
"mining machines will still be in short supply" overseas, even if
domestic sales disappear.
The impact will be further softened by the fact that
"domestic customers will go overseas to mine", it added in a
statement sent to Reuters.
Illustrating the trend, Shenzhen-headquartered BIT Mining
Ltd said in a statement on Monday that it had entered into a deal with a
Kazakhstan-based company to jointly invest in a crypto mining data center in
the central Asian country.
Bitcoin miners use increasingly powerful,
specially-designed computer equipment, known as "rigs", to verify
bitcoin transactions in a process which produces newly minted bitcoins.
The energy-hungry business is big in China, although the
country's market share had been declining for years due to regulatory
uncertainty.
If China quickly loses its crypto computing power, foreign
miners will benefit, Alex Ao, vice president of Innosilicon Technology, a
chip-designer and crypto mining rig maker, said.
"Places like North America and Central Asia have
advantages in terms of power supply and policy support," Ao said, adding
that more Chinese miners will shift abroad.
Edward Lu, senior vice president of Canaan Inc, another
Chinese maker of mining machines, said it was looking at similar markets.
"The strategy should be to strenuously develop markets
such as Kazakhstan, Canada, and North Europe, where energy resources are
abundant and cheap, while regulations are clear and predictable," Lu told
Reuters.
Although China's northern region of Inner Mongolia, a major
mining centre, published draft rules on Tuesday to root out the business, other
major mining centres have yet to issue their own, after last week's salvo from
a State Council committee led by Chinese Vice Premier Liu He.
"Relocating their mining operations to overseas is the
miners' only Plan B," Winston Ma, NYU Law School adjunct professor, said,
adding that only China's biggest mining operators can make the exodus smoothly.
Kazhakstan, which clarified its crypto mining rules last
year, hopes it will boost an oil-dominated economy.
"We received inquiries from three Chinese bitcoin
miners on Monday about using our hosting services," said Didar Bekbauov
co-founder of Kazakhstan based Hive Mining, which provides 'hosting hotels' for
mining machines.
Bekbauov said it appeared they were looking for an
alternative after the crackdown.
Some miners are angry at having to move.
"As long as the mining business is not illegal, you
should not kill the industry with just a few words from officials," one
Chinese crypto player, who declined to be identified, said.