Tesla's Musk halts use of bitcoin for car purchases
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[May 13, 2021] By
Hyunjoo Jin and Kanishka Singh
(Reuters) -Tesla
Inc will no longer accept bitcoin for car purchases, Chief Executive
Elon Musk said on Wednesday, citing long-brewing environmental concerns
for a swift reversal in the company's position on the cryptocurrency.
Bitcoin fell more than 10% after Musk tweeted his decision to suspend
its use, less than two months after Tesla began accepting the world's
biggest digital currency for payment. Other cryptocurrencies, including
ethereum, also fell before regaining some ground in Asia trade.
The use of bitcoin to buy Tesla's electric vehicles had highlighted a
dichotomy between Musk's reputation as an environmentalist and the use
of his popularity and stature as one of the world's richest people to
back cryptocurrencies.
Some Tesla investors, along with environmentalists, have been
increasingly critical about the way bitcoin is "mined" using vast
amounts of electricity generated with fossil fuels.
Musk said on Wednesday he backed that concern, especially the use of
"coal, which has the worst emissions of any fuel."
"Cryptocurrency is a good idea on many levels and we believe it has a
promising future, but this cannot come at great cost to the
environment," he tweeted. Tesla shares fell 1.25% after hours.
Tesla revealed in February it had bought $1.5 billion of bitcoin, before
accepting it as payment for cars in March, driving a roughly 20% surge
in the cryptocurrency.
Tesla would retain its bitcoin holdings with the plan to use the
cryptocurrency as soon as mining transitions to more sustainable energy
sources, Musk said.
Bitcoin is created when high-powered computers compete against other
machines to solve complex mathematical puzzles, an energy-intensive
process that currently often relies on electricity generated with fossil
fuels, particularly coal.
At current rates, such bitcoin “mining” devours about the same amount of
energy annually as the Netherlands did in 2019, the latest available
data from the University of Cambridge and the International Energy
Agency shows.
Analysts said Musk's about-face was inevitable.
"The environmental impact from mining bitcoins was one of the biggest
risks for the entire crypto market," said Edward Moya, a senior market
analyst at currency trading firm OANDA.
Meltem Demirors, chief strategy officer at digital asset manager
CoinShares Group, said Tesla was unlikely to have sold many, if any,
cars using bitcoin and the backflip generated positive publicity while
simplifying payment processes.
"Elon was getting a lot of questions and criticisms and this statement
allows him to appease critics while still keeping bitcoin on his balance
sheet," Demirors said.
[to top of second column] |
Tesla has suspended the use of bitcoin to purchase its vehicles
because of climate concerns, Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk said
in a tweet on Wednesday, reversing the company's stance in the face
of an outcry from some environmentalists and investors. Gloria Tso
reports.
Mark Humphery-Jenner, an associate professor of finance at the University of New
South Wales, said he was more concerned about Tesla management's "very hasty and
precipitous" decision-making.
Musk did not say in his Twitter comments whether any vehicles had been purchased
with bitcoin and Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
CRYPTOCURRENCY SUPPORT
Some bitcoin proponents note that the existing financial system - with its
millions of employees and computers in air-conditioned offices - uses large
amounts of energy too.
Musk reiterated he remained a strong believer in cryptocurrencies.
"We are also looking at other cryptocurrencies that use <1% of bitcoin's
energy/transaction," he tweeted on Wednesday.
Just a day earlier, Musk had polled Twitter users on whether Tesla should accept
dogecoin, a currency he has helped turn from a joke into a valuable commodity.
He announced on Sunday that his commercial rocket company SpaceX will accept
dogecoin as payment to launch a lunar mission next year - just hours after he
sent the cryptocurrency spiraling downward when he called it a "a hustle" during
a guest-host spot on the "Saturday Night Live" comedy sketch TV show.
CHINA DOMINANCE
The dominance of Chinese bitcoin miners and lack of motivation to swap cheap
fossil fuels for more expensive renewables could mean there are few quick fixes
to the cryptocurrency's emissions problem.
Chinese miners account for about 70% of bitcoin production, data from the
University of Cambridge's Centre for Alternative Finance shows. They tend to use
renewable energy - mostly hydropower - during the rainy summer months, but
fossil fuels - primarily coal - for the rest of the year.
Officials in Beijing are conducting a check on data centres involved in
cryptocurrency mining to better understand their impact on energy consumption,
sources told Reuters last month.
In theory, blockchain analysis firms say, it is possible to track the source of
bitcoin, raising the possibility that a premium could be charged for green
bitcoin.
(Reporting by Ankur Banerjee and Kanishka Singh in Bengaluru, Anna Irrera and
Tom Wilson in London, Megan Davies in New York, Kevin Buckland in Tokyo and
Hyunjoo Jin in Berkeley; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila, Peter Henderson, Edward
Tobin and Jane Wardell)
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