Crypto investment firm Paradigm releases a research report stating that Bitcoin mining accounts for only 0.23% of global energy consumption and 0.08% of carbon emissions. It should not be viewed as a “power-hungry monster,” but rather as a “grid stabilizer” that can flexibly adjust electricity use based on price signals. As AI data center expansion sparks energy debates, many mining companies are accelerating their transition to AI computing businesses.
(Background recap: Opposed to Bitcoin’s power consumption? Study: AI’s electricity use will surpass Bitcoin mining by the end of 2025)
(Additional context: Bitcoin mining vs. AI: Who is consuming electricity faster?)
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As AI data centers emerge rapidly around the world, energy consumption debates heat up again—Bitcoin mining often becomes a target. However, a recent report by crypto investment giant Paradigm directly challenges this narrative, arguing that Bitcoin mining is heavily misunderstood and stigmatized in energy discussions.
Paradigm researcher Justin Slaughter and co-author Veronica Irwin point out in the report that many analyses measure Bitcoin’s energy consumption per transaction, but in reality, mining energy use relates to network security and miner competition, not transaction volume.
Furthermore, some models assume unlimited energy supply or that miners will continue operating regardless of profitability—assumptions that do not hold in competitive electricity markets.
According to Paradigm’s data:
The core argument in Paradigm’s report is about “demand elasticity.” Bitcoin miners typically seek the lowest-cost electricity, often from surplus or off-peak generation. When the grid faces stress, mining operations can quickly reduce power use; when supply is abundant, they can increase consumption.
This makes mining a form of “flexible load,” similar to other energy-intensive industries that respond to real-time electricity prices. In other words, miners are not competing with residents for power but are helping the grid “absorb” excess electricity.
Another aspect of the energy debate is that more traditional Bitcoin mining firms are transitioning. Several publicly listed miners, including Hut 8, HIVE Digital, MARA Holdings, TeraWulf, and IREN, have begun reallocating some of their hash power from Bitcoin mining to AI data processing to pursue higher profits.
This means the energy infrastructure originally built for mining is being repurposed to serve AI computational demands. The power foundation laid during the mining era is now a springboard for AI expansion.
Paradigm’s analysis shifts the discussion from environmental issues to power grid economics. It implies that policymakers should avoid simplistic energy comparisons when evaluating Bitcoin mining and instead consider the broader electricity market context.
As AI data centers’ electricity consumption grows exponentially—and their construction pace (1-2 years) far outstrips grid planning cycles (5-10 years)—the real “power-hungry monster” may not be Bitcoin miners but those 24/7, full-speed AI servers that cannot be flexibly regulated.
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