Rolling blackouts plague Iran and some suspect bitcoin mining may have a role in the outages
The demand on the grid has not let up, however — even as Iranians stopped using air conditioners as the weather cooled in the fall and before winter months set in, when people fire up their gas heaters.
Meanwhile, bitcoin's value has rocketed to all-time highs after the
The surge has led some to suspect that organized cryptocurrency mining — sucking away huge amounts of power — has played a part in the outages in
“Unfortunately, some opportunistic and exploitative individuals use subsidized electricity, public networks and other resources for cryptocurrency mining without authorization,"
Iran’s state energy company did not respond to a request for comment.
Power outages have come and gone in the past in
Climate change has been blamed in part, with persisting droughts and less water running through Iranian hydroelectric dams.
Fuel reserves, both in diesel and natural gas, also remain low even though
For his part, Pezeshkian has said that he must "honestly tell the public about the energy situation.”
“We have no choice but to consume energy economically, especially gas, in the current conditions and the cold weather,” he said in mid-November. “I myself use warm clothes at home; others can do the same."
Still, winter heating isn't in full swing quite yet on
In many poor and densely populated neighborhoods across the country, people have access to free, unmetered electricity. Mosques, schools, hospitals and other sites also receive free power.
And with electricity in general sold at subsidized rates, bitcoin processing centers have boomed. They require immense amounts of electricity to power specialized computers and to keep them cool.
Determining how much power is used up by mining is difficult, particularly as miners now use virtual private networks that mask their location, said
Also, miners have been renting apartments to hide their rigs inside of empty homes. “They distribute their machines across several apartments to avoid being detected," Alavi said.
In 2021, one estimate suggested
Rajabi, the state electricity company CEO, said his firm would offer rewards of
The farms have caused “an abnormal increase in consumption, disruptions, and problems in power networks,” Rajabi said.
The amount of power used by some 230,000 unlicensed devices is equivalent, he said, to the entire power needs of
Iranian officials and media have not linked bitcoin's surge and the ongoing blackouts but the public has, with social media users resharing a video showing a massive bitcoin farm earlier this year uncovered in
The
That suggests the Guard itself — one of the most-powerful forces within
In contrast, Iranian media nearly every day report on individual mining operations being raided by police.
"The question for the economists inside
However, he cautioned against thinking of bitcoin as a magic bullet for
“A pattern of behavior screams out to intelligence services," Nephew said. "It screams out to bank compliance departments.”
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Gambrell reported from
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