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Exposed: ‘Green’ Chia Crypto Devours 18 Times More Energy Than Claimed

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Is the Hype Around Eco-Friendly Crypto Just Hot Air?

Everyone talks about Bitcoin’s massive energy suck. It guzzles power like a small country. But what about those <'green' alternatives> promising to save the planet? Enter Chia, the crypto that said it would fix everything by using spare hard drive space instead of crazy computations. Sounds great, right? Wrong. A new study blows the lid off:

than its makers claimed. Even Chia’s boss admits the numbers are close.

Bitcoin’s Power Problem: A Quick Recap

Bitcoin runs on proof-of-work. Miners solve tough math puzzles to secure the network. This burns huge electricity – about 157 terawatt-hours a year. That’s like Poland’s total power use. No wonder people hunt for greener options.

What Makes Chia Different?

Chia skips the math puzzles. It uses proof-of-space-and-time. Miners offer up empty space on hard drives. The more space you give, and the longer you keep it, the better your shot at new coins. Simple and low-energy? That’s the pitch.

To mine Chia, you do two things:

  • Plotting: Create special data files. This needs lots of RAM, CPU, and fast SSDs. It’s hard on hardware.
  • Farming: Store the files on cheap hard drives and prove they exist now and then. This is the ‘easy’ part.

Chia promised just 50,000 tonnes of carbon emissions a year. Way better than Bitcoin. But researchers dug deeper.

The Study That Changed Everything

A team from Algeria and France tested real hardware with precise power meters. They ran plotting and farming tasks. Key finds:

  • Plotting kills SSDs fast. Just 160 plots wreck a new drive.
  • Miners buy tons of new drives. Making them creates ’embodied carbon’ – emissions from production.
  • Chia’s real carbon footprint? Between 0.584 and 1.402 million tonnes per year. That’s 18 times the claim!

Compared to Ethereum (now super low-energy after its update), Chia’s emissions are 100 times worse.

“Mainly it’s from embodied emissions. To use Chia, people have to buy hardware. When you buy them, energy is used to create them.”

Says one researcher. Chia forgot to count this in their math.

Chia’s Defense: Recycled Drives and Future Fixes

Chia CEO Gene Hoffman pushes back. He says they use old data center drives headed for trash. “We created a market for cast-offs,” he notes. The study overcounts by blaming full production emissions on recycled gear.

“I don’t think [the numbers are] wildly off,” Hoffman admits. “Off a bit.”

Big news ahead: Proof of Space 2.0 launches soon. It aims to slash emissions big time. Chia says they’re already better than Bitcoin and getting greener.

Why This Matters for Crypto’s Green Future

Crypto wants to go green. Ethereum cut energy by 99.99% with proof-of-stake. Others like Solana and Cardano focus on efficiency from day one. But Chia’s story warns: Don’t trust hype. Look at full costs.

Embodied emissions are sneaky. Any blockchain needing special hardware has a hidden footprint. Recycling helps, but new buys still add up as networks grow.

Crypto Annual Energy (TWh) Carbon (Million Tonnes)
Bitcoin 157 High (varies)
Chia (claimed) Low 0.05
Chia (study) 0.584 – 1.402
Ethereum (post-merge) 0.01 Negligible

Lessons for Investors and Miners

If you’re eyeing Chia for its green cred, think again. Profits might come from cheap old drives, but environment? Questionable. Watch for Proof of Space 2.0 – it could change the game.

For the industry: True green crypto needs:

  1. No wasteful hardware churn.
  2. Real power measurements, including production.
  3. Proof-of-stake or similar low-impact methods.

Reddit buzz and social signals can predict price swings, but energy scandals hurt long-term trust.

Bottom Line: Greenwashing in Crypto?

Chia is better than Bitcoin – for now. But <18 times more energy> shatters the ‘planet saver’ image. As blockchain grows, sustainability isn’t optional. Demand transparency. The crypto world is watching.

Stay tuned for updates on Proof of Space 2.0 and other eco-crypto battles. What do you think – can Chia redeem itself?

Disclaimer: Blockmanity is a news portal and does not provide any financial advice. Blockmanity's role is to inform the cryptocurrency and blockchain community about what's going on in this space. Please do your own due diligence before making any investment. Blockmanity won't be responsible for any loss of funds.