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British Columbia to Permanently Ban New Crypto Mining Projects From Grid

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Energy Priorities Shift as Canada Reassesses Mining’s Footprint

The Canadian province of British Columbia (B.C.) is set to permanently ban new cryptocurrency mining projects from accessing the provincial power grid, the government announced this week. The move formalizes a temporary moratorium first introduced in 2022 and marks a decisive shift toward prioritizing energy for sustainable industries.


Energy Use vs. Economic Value

Officials at BC Hydro, the province’s main utility, said mining operations consume enormous power with limited local benefit. “A single large-scale crypto mine can draw as much electricity as 100,000 homes,” a spokesperson noted.

Data from the Ministry of Energy shows that active crypto mines in B.C. already use over 500 megawatts — roughly 2% of total grid capacity. Under the new rule, existing projects can continue operating but will not receive additional capacity or new grid connections.


Environmental and Market Repercussions

Bitcoin miners reacted sharply to the announcement. Mining companies like Hive Digital and Iris Energy, both with Canadian roots, saw share prices dip between 4–6% in early trading following the decision. Some are now exploring relocation options to Alberta or the U.S. Midwest, where electricity costs remain competitive and regulations are looser.

For Bitcoin’s network, the impact is minimal in the near term. Hash rate distribution has already diversified globally, with the U.S., Kazakhstan, and Russia hosting significant mining capacity. Yet, the symbolic weight of Canada — once a mining powerhouse — pulling back underscores growing global pressure on energy-intensive proof-of-work systems.


A Turning Point for Policy and Perception

B.C.’s decision comes amid global debate about balancing crypto innovation with sustainability. As governments tighten ESG standards, miners face higher expectations to use renewable energy and prove tangible economic value to host communities.

Forward Look: The permanent ban may accelerate the shift toward cleaner, decentralized mining — and remind the industry that its future depends not just on hash power, but on social and environmental license to operate.

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