As Oil Giants Turn to Bitcoin Mining, Some Spin Burning Fossil Fuels for Cryptocurrency as a Climate Solution

In a pilot project last year, ExxonMobil used up to 18 million cubic feet of gas per month to mine bitcoin in North Dakota.
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Gas flare in North Dakota
Natural gas flares from a flare-head at the Orvis State well on the Evanson family farm in McKenzie County, North Dakota, east of Arnegard and west of Watford City. Credit: Tim Evanson (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Flaring โ€” or the burning of stranded natural gas directly at an oil well โ€” is one of the drilling industryโ€™s most notorious problems, often condemned as a pointlessly polluting waste of billions of dollars and trillions of cubic feet of natural gas.

In early March, oil giant ExxonMobil signed up to meet the World Bankโ€™s โ€œzero routine flaring by 2030โ€ goal (a plan that โ€” when you look just a bit closer โ€” doesnโ€™t entirely eliminate flaring but instead reduces โ€œabsolute flaring and methane emissionsโ€ by 60 to 70 percent.)

How does ExxonMobil plan to reach that goal? In part, it turns out, by burning stranded natural gas directly at its oil wells โ€” not in towering flares, but down in mobile cryptocurrency mines.

Roughly speaking, crypto miners compete with each other to solve complex puzzles. Those puzzles, designed to require enormous computing power, can be used to help make a given coin more secure. Successful miners are rewarded for their efforts with newly generated coins. 

Using the energy-intensive process of crypto mining to fight pollution is the latest in a wave of claimed climate โ€œsolutionsโ€ whose environmental benefits seem to only appear if you squint at them from very specific angles โ€” like โ€œlow carbonโ€ oil, measured not by the oilโ€™s actual carbon content but by how much more carbon was spent to obtain it.

Critics point out that replacing flaring with mining crypto could become a way for fossil fuel producers to spin money directly from energy, polluting the climate without heating peopleโ€™s homes or transporting people from place to place in the process. โ€œIn terms of productive value, I would say there is none,โ€ Jacob Silverman, a staff writer at the New Republic, said in a recent interview. โ€œThe main value of cryptocurrency is as a tool for speculation. People are trying to get rich.โ€

That, of course, includes oil drillers. โ€œThis is the best gift the oil and gas industry couldโ€™ve gotten,โ€ Adam Ortolf, a crypto mining executive, told CNBC. โ€œThey were leaving a lot of hydrocarbons on the table, but now, theyโ€™re no longer limited by geography to sell energy.โ€ 

Using crypto mining to sponge up unused natural gas could carry environmental benefits, for example, if you compare that option against flaring that gas and using other supplies of natural gas to mine that same crypto. But, in reality, there are a lot of other moving pieces at play, including calls for cryptocurrency to start lowering its energy demand.

Bitcoin, in fact, has grown so energy intensive that tech industry insiders have begun openly discussing the ways that itโ€™s causing a โ€œclimate crisis.โ€

โ€œA single ledger in bitcoin consumes enough energy to power your house for almost a day,โ€ Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger told Bloomberg in mid-February. โ€œThatโ€™s a climate crisis.โ€

โ€œIf we produce a technology that consumes that much energy,โ€ he added, โ€œwow, thatโ€™s not okay.โ€

A bitcoin mine. Credit: Marko Ahtisaari (CC BY 2.0)

Meanwhile, oil giants like Exxon have begun increasingly eyeing cryptocurrency mining โ€” which could directly connect the worldโ€™s biggest producers of fossil fuels to an industry with an ever-expanding appetite for energy.

A pilot project in North Dakotaโ€™s Bakken shale has already allowed ExxonMobil to steer up to 18 million cubic feet of gas a month into bitcoin mining ventures in 2021, Bloomberg reported last week, adding that the oil giant is considering expanding cryptocurrency mining pilots into Alaska, Germany, the Qua Iboe Terminal in Nigeria, the Vaca Muerta shale in Argentina, and Guyana โ€” a small South American country that ExxonMobil pushed into the ranks of the top ten gas-flaring countries in 2020.

And Exxon is hardly alone. ConocoPhillips has also launched a Bakken shale pilot program. The two are founding members of the OOC Oil & Gas Blockchain Consortium, whose members also include Chevron, Equinor, Hess, Pioneer, and others. Russia also recently announced that it would accept bitcoin as payment for fossil fuels and crypto mining companies have described talks with officials from Saudi Arabia and other major oil producers.

The crypto mining company working with Exxon says itโ€™s โ€œon a mission to eliminate the routine flaring of natural gas by providing oil and gas companies with a fast, low cost and simple solution to stranded gas.โ€

At a time when energy markets are already in upheaval due to the war in Ukraine, the drive to use gas directly at the wellhead pits cryptocurrency miners against other potential users of flare gas, like buyers whoโ€™d be able to purchase that gas if drillers connected those oil wells to gas gathering lines and processing plants. The oil and gas industryโ€™s backers have used fear of supply shortages to push for more fossil fuel production in the United States โ€” a strategy that, of course, assumes that fuel could be delivered to buyers.

The justifications offered for gas flaring are often economic, with companies commonly arguing that itโ€™s too expensive and financially burdensome to connect oil wells to gas pipelines or to process gas in remote oilfields. โ€œFlaring is also used to burn gases that would otherwise present a safety problem,โ€ the environmental group Earthworks notes, adding that flaring and venting unburned gas both โ€œpollute our air, contribute to climate change, deprive states and individuals of revenue and waste the recovered resource.โ€ 

But regulators seem to have previously managed to drive down flaring in some areas without relying heavily on crypto.

Back in 2013, the state of North Dakota found itself embroiled in a fossil fuel scandal so glaring it was literally visible from outer space. Amid the sudden fracking frenzy in the Bakken shale, drillers seeking oil were burning off the natural gas that also came from shale wells at astounding rates, igniting flares that left North Dakotaโ€™s remote fields more brightly lit than major cities on the East Coast in nighttime satellite images.

By January 2014, drillers were burning off 36 percent of the gas produced in the state right at the wellhead, Energy Information Administration (EIA) data showed. In the years since, regulators have steadily driven that percentage down, with the EIA more recently reporting that 7.5 percent of North Dakotaโ€™s gas production was flared in the first three quarters of 2021.

Thatโ€™s in part because the oil industry expanded its capacity to process gas from oil wells and to pipe it away to be burned by consumers. The stateโ€™s gas processing capacity more than tripled from 2013 to 2020, the Journal of Petroleum Technology reports.

Flaring remains an issue in the Bakken โ€” it is, after all, the place where Exxonโ€™s pilot program launched last year. But the prior reductions do illustrate that gas thatโ€™s stranded today wonโ€™t necessarily be stranded tomorrow.

Meanwhile, crypto carries its own controversies โ€” not just its enormous appetite for energy, which is notoriously larger than many countriesโ€™ โ€” but also concerns about some currencyโ€™s stability and even risks that crypto might pose to broader financial systems.

The cryptocurrency world is awash in open pump-and-dump schemes, or coordinated efforts to temporarily drive up prices just before selling off, for example, and some observers have warned about cryptocurrencyโ€™s reliance on so-called โ€œstablecoins,โ€ designed to back crypto coins with other assets and encourage confidence in their worth.

Stablecoins โ€œare not yet subject to consistent regulatory safeguards โ€” meaning they pose an elevated risk to consumers and might even threaten the stability of the financial system,โ€ Nellie Liang, the Treasury Departmentโ€™s undersecretary for domestic finance wrote in a March 6 op-ed in the Washington Post.

Nonetheless, claims that using natural gas to mine crypto can help the environment have drawn powerful backers. โ€œI think cryptocurrency is a net plus for the environment, and in fact, a big net plus for the environment,โ€ Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) told Motherboard at the Texas Blockchain Summit in October 2021. โ€œI think being able to take stranded natural gas and put it to productive use is a big positive for the environment.โ€ 

The market value of all cryptocurrencies hit $2.3 trillion, the New York Times reported in December, adding that the price of one Bitcoin rose from $7,000 at the start of 2020 to roughly $50,000 near the end of 2021. Cryptocurrencies have also grown increasingly mainstream, with one 2021 Pew survey finding that 1 in 3 Americans aged 18 to 29 say theyโ€™ve used crypto and a handful of companies advertising cryptocurrencies during the Super Bowl this year.

For a way to store abstract wealth, Bitcoinโ€™s real-world energy demand to date has been stunning. The University of Cambridgeโ€™s Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index estimates that, all told, Bitcoin has already consumed about 310 terawatt-hours of electricity, with the coinโ€™s cumulative demand for power rising on an exponential curve over the past decade or so. (To put that in context, the entire United States used about 3,800 terawatt-hours in 2020, according to Statista). The crypto industryโ€™s own estimates are lower, with one company, CoinShares, publishing estimates of about 89 terawatt-hours and concluding that Bitcoin caused a little less than one percent of the worldโ€™s carbon emissions in 2021.

Of course, Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies donโ€™t always rely on fossil fuels. Estimates for how much of Bitcoinโ€™s power comes from renewable energy at a given time can vary widely and reflect rapid changes, from as low as 25 percent to as high as 73 percent.

Bitcoin mining is designed to grow more complex over time. While the first Bitcoins were mined on a home computer, over time, competitive miners have shifted from using PC graphics cards to buying up entire power plants and filling warehouses and airplane hangars with processors.

But itโ€™s not clear that Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies need to use that much energy โ€” especially looking forward. Environmental groups launched a โ€œChange the Codeโ€ campaign this week aiming to drive down Bitcoinโ€™s energy consumption. Theyโ€™re calling on Bitcoin to change its software code from a so-called โ€œproof of workโ€ authentication system to a โ€œproof of stakeโ€ system that they say could slash Bitcoinโ€™s energy demand instantly.

โ€œWe need to clean up our industry,โ€ Chris Larsen, chairman of Ripple, a company that uses blockchain technology, said in support of Change the Code. โ€œAnd the issue is not, as some have suggested, powering bitcoin with clean energy. We need the limited supply of clean energy for other vital uses. The issue is changing the code to use far less energy. Thatโ€™s the environmentally responsible way forward.โ€

One of Bitcoinโ€™s key competitors, Ethereum, is already making that switch, Change the Code, points out. โ€œNo matter how you feel about bitcoin,โ€ added Greenpeace USA Chief Program Officer Tefere Gebre, โ€œpushing those with the power to ensure a code change will make our planet and communities safer from the destructive impacts of climate change.โ€

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Sharon Kelly is an attorney and investigative reporter based in Pennsylvania. She was previously a senior correspondent at The Capitol Forum and, prior to that, she reported for The New York Times, The Guardian, The Nation, Earth Island Journal, and a variety of other print and online publications.

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