Chinese bitcoin mining pools experience sharp hash rate drop

Quick Take

  • Mining pools that cater to Chinese miner clients have witnessed a significant drop in hash rate in the last 24 hours.
  • This comes as China continues to crack down on bitcoin mining, with further restrictions put in place today.

Some of the world's biggest bitcoin mining pools that cater to Chinese miner clients have seen a sharp hash rate drop over the past 24 hours.

Data from BTC.com shows that major China-based bitcoin mining pools, in particular AntPool, F2Pool, Poolin, BTC.com, have seen hash rate drops between 11% to 30% in the last 24 hours. Bitcoin mining pools run by Huobi and Binance have also seen a 24-hour decline of over 10%.

The hashing power of the two main non-Chinese mining pools, namely Slushpool and Foundry USA, have remained steady over the past day.

BTC.com; as of 11:10 UTC time on June 9

Such a notable hash rate drop of Chinese bitcoin mining pools comes as China continues to crack down on bitcoin mining. Today, the Changji prefecture in China's Xinjiang province ordered bitcoin mining farms in the Zhundong Economic Technological Development Park to shut down their operations by 2:00 pm China time on June 9.

The Zhundong park is a 15,500 square km economic zone home to a variety of coal production industries including coal-based power plants and industrial factories. It also houses a significant portion of the bitcoin mining facilities in the Xinjiang province. 

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In April, bitcoin miners in Xinjiang were forced to shut down due to security concerns surrounding local coal-based power plants after several security incidents. Bitcoin's hash rate also dropped by around 25% in the next seven days before mining farms plugged back in.

Expanding outside of China

Since the crackdown began, there have been reports of Chinese bitcoin miners starting to relocate their equipment away from China. This may see hash power move toward Central Asia, North America and some parts of the EU.

Bitcoin mining hardware firm Canaan said, in its Q1 financial report, that overseas sales of mining equipment made up nearly four fifths of its revenue that quarter. This appeared to be the first time Canaan has reported that its domestic sales were eclipsed by its overseas business.

Over in the US, bitcoin mining farms are expanding. Companies including mining companies Argo Blockchain, Riot Blockchain and market making firm GSR are planning to increase their bitcoin mining operations, with GSR focusing on using hydroelectric power. Payments firm Square has also partnered with Bitcoin technology startup Blockstream to launch a 100% solar-powered Bitcoin mine in the United States. 


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About Author

Wolfie joined The Block’s news team in 2020 and switched to the research side in 2021 to focus on crypto mining analysis. Prior to The Block, he had been a journalist at CoinDesk for three years. Wolfie has a background in financial journalism.