The US Department of Energy (DOE) will begin collecting data on crypto mines’ electricity use, following criticism from environmental advocates over how energy-hungry those operations are.
- Home
- Technology
- News
Crypto mines will have to start reporting their energy use in the US
The US Energy Information Administration says it will start a survey of crypto mines’ electricity consumption following concerns about Bitcoin’s energy hunger and greenhouse gas emissions.


“We will specifically focus on how the energy demand for cryptocurrency mining is evolving, identify geographic areas of high growth, and quantify the sources of electricity used to meet cryptocurrency mining demand,” Joe DeCarolis, administrator of the Energy Information Administration (EIA), said in a press release today.
“We will specifically focus on how the energy demand for cryptocurrency mining is evolving.”
The EIA, the statistical agency of the Department of Energy, announced that it is “initiating a provisional survey of electricity consumption information from identified cryptocurrency mining companies” starting next week. The cryptocurrency mining companies will have to comply, per an “emergency collection of data request” the Office of Management and Budget authorized last week.
Getting to this point has been a slog. After a ban on Bitcoin mining in China in 2021, the US became the world’s biggest hub for Bitcoin mining. The mining boom raised flags for lawmakers and activists because of the energy demands of the process. Bitcoin mines managed to resurrect fossil fuel power plants and raise electricity costs for some residents in New York.
In 2022, Democratic lawmakers asked the biggest crypto mining companies in the US to disclose their electricity consumption and associated pollution. None of the companies responded with all the data they were asked to provide, and Congress subsequently asked the DOE and EPA to require that crypto companies publicly share the information.
In letters between the agencies and Democratic lawmakers shared exclusively with The Verge last year, Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm wrote a letter to Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) saying that the EIA has the authority to require crypto operations to report their energy use. Doing so would “require development of a new survey to collect this information,” the letter says. It looks like that’s what’s happening now. According to the letter, the EIA can potentially also require utilities to share information about how much electricity they sell to crypto companies.
A spokesperson for the Blockchain Association didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Waymo hits 170 million miles while avoiding serious mayhem
- 9 hours ago

Tesla’s Full Self-Driving is on the cusp of a recall
- 9 hours ago

The people dying in ICE custody
- 16 hours ago

These animals can cause big trouble. Why are states unleashing them by the millions?
- 7 hours ago

Fitbit’s AI health coach will soon be able to read your medical records
- 9 hours ago

James Talarico’s “no meat” controversy explains a lot about America
- 16 hours ago

Casio’s new $600 calculator is a work of art
- 9 hours ago

The pain from the Strait of Hormuz crisis will be felt far beyond the pump
- 16 hours ago

Maybe it’s time for The Bachelor franchise to end
- 16 hours ago

Adobe’s AI image generator can now be trained on your own art
- 9 hours ago

Here’s how Iran could become a “forever war”
- 16 hours ago

How to talk to your doctor about money
- 16 hours ago







