The Bitcoin Mining Council was born of a desire to help shape the narrative around the cryptocurrencyâs energy use, said MicroStrategy CEO Michael Saylor.
Speaking Tuesday at CoinDeskâs Consensus 2021, the bitcoin evangelist said he worked with Tesla CEO Elon Musk and a handful of North American miners to create a loose organization that could publish energy usage data in an effort to address concerns that the cryptocurrency is not environmentally friendly.Â
âIt became pretty clear that bitcoiners have a good story, but itâs a pretty complicated story and we need to find a way to share our story,â he said.Â
Saylor said he connected Musk with the eight North American bitcoin miners to host a discussion around energy usage. (The founding members represent an estimated 10% of the hashrate, or computing power securing the Bitcoin network; most of the worldâs hashrate comes out of machines in China. No additional members have been announced since Saylor announced the councilâs formation Monday.) Musk sent bitcoinâs price plummeting this month after announcing his carmaker would no longer accept bitcoin as payment due to energy concerns.Â
âHe thought we would all benefit if we were able to publish energy usage and source of energy usage data,â Saylor said Tuesday.Â
This is not information that the crypto industry currently shares, Saylor said, which allows other parties to create their own models which may be less flattering to the cryptocurrency industry.
Saylor, who is known for speaking of the benefits of bitcoin as he added over 92,000 BTC to his companyâs balance sheet, raised the ire of the community on Monday by announcing that he hosted fellow billionaire Musk and a handful of mining firms in forming the Bitcoin Mining Council.
Critics likened the move to the ill-fated New York Agreement of 2017, a closed-door group that sought to influence how bitcoin scaled. Sundayâs closed-door session of bitcoin miners seeking to change how network participants report their energy use wasnât made public until after the fact, showing a lack of âself-awareness,â wrote Great American Mining co-founder Marty Bent.
However, Peter Wall, CEO of council member Argo Blockchain, said Monday the group does not plan to change any aspect of the bitcoin ecosystem, just address environmental concerns.
âI think Elonâs first-order ask was âhey, can we come up with a way to publish or [boost] transparency for bitcoin mining energy usage,ââ Saylor said Tuesday. âI think the first step is, letâs come up with a protocol for us to publish energy information in a way that we can share it with the world and then work together to make sure that we pursue sustainable energy goals.â
If Saylor and Musk intended to secretly try to control bitcoin with a private meeting, they wouldnât have announced the meetingâs existence to the world, Saylor said.
âEverybody in that meeting, including Elon, are passionate believers in decentralization,â Saylor said.
The group is more interested in âmanaging concerns, especially from uninformed parties,â about bitcoinâs energy usage, the CEO said.Â
âWe need to make sure that people that are hostile to bitcoin and hostile to the crypto industry arenât defining these narratives and defining those models and defining those metrics,â he said. âIn the absence of any good information or any response on our part, they will define those models.â
UPDATE (May 25, 21:30 UTC): Added detail about council membersâ combined share of global Bitcoin network hashrate.