Kevin OâLeary appeared on CoinDesk TV yesterday to deliver a bombshell: Before Wall Street goes all-in on bitcoin, he said, it needs to know how BTC is being mined.
The âShark Tankâ star and chairman of OâShares ETFs said institutions want to invest in BTC but they have environmental issues. Theyâre leery, as it were, of operations driven by coal or other climate-unfriendly technology. And they want transparency around origin.
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OâLeary even compared some BTC to âblood diamonds,â suggesting that miners who want to be on the right side of history need to become more efficient.Â
This raises a lot of big questions, including whether BTC can remain fungible, or whether we might see a split between provably âcleanâ coins and coins with uncertain provenance.Â
The reactions on Twitter to OâLearyâs comments were furious.Â
Commenters speculated OâLeary was trying to drive down the BTC price so Wall Street could buy more on the cheap. They accused him of hypocrisy. (Doesnât Wall Street invest in gold and oil and other noxious stuff?) They scoffed, âWho cares about Wall Street?â
Others shrugged and said theyâd heard it all before.Â
And it is true that this is a new version of an old narrative. As my colleague Marc Hochstein wrote, âFor years, there has been talk of newly mined, âvirginâ bitcoins fetching a premium over units that have passed through multiple wallets.â That alleged coin discrimination had to do with legal and regulatory rather than environmental concerns.
Meanwhile, the âbitcoin energy debateâ has been one of cryptoâs fiercest (which is saying something).Â
On one side are people who complain (somewhat erroneously) that bitcoinâs energy consumption is the size of a small country and who canât understand why a climate-threatened world needs energy-intensive peer-to-peer money.Â
On the other, people say that 1) bitcoinâs mining is getting cleaner, 2) that fiat uses plenty of energy too, and 3) that, why donât we ever talk about the energy consumption of, say, Americaâs wars and Christmas lights?Â
To me, OâLearyâs comments point to two reckonings.Â
One, as much as Bitcoiners want to dismiss the energy/environment debate, itâs not going away. There are simply too many people frightened about climate change to allow BTC a free pass on these questions. The community needs to account for its footprint the same way every industry (more or less) has to these days. Thatâs just modern business.Â
And two, well, the energy debate actually doesnât matter. Itâs not important if you think the critics are wrong or hypocritical. It only matters that the people who matter on Wall Street take this seriously.Â
At bottom, this is a question less about the environment and more about institutionalization. Large companies are bound by sustainability and ESG committees. They have stakeholders and rules and processes to follow. And, these days, environmental impact is a material liability. They need to prove theyâre clean.
Bitcoiners may not like it. But âgreenerâ bitcoin may be the price of admission to mainstream markets. This isnât 2015 anymore.