Chinese miners have been on the lookout for other jurisdictions since the Beijing government has taken action against their jobs. Iran has emerged as a promising location by putting up minimal effort. Nonetheless, the country’s state-owned power company has expressed concerns. About a potential influx of miners and illegal mining equipment imports from China.
Chinese miners have been on the lookout for other jurisdictions since the Beijing government has taken action against their jobs. Iran has emerged as a promising location by putting up minimal effort. Nonetheless, the country’s state-owned power company has expressed concerns. Especially about a potential invasion of miners and unlicensed mining equipment imports from China.
Tavanir CEO Mohammad Hussein Motevallizadeh reacted to media reports on the closure of mining sites in China, in a letter released by the monetary news site Eghtesadnews. According to a story published by the English-language business daily Financial Tribune. The executive cautioned that the government’s anti-mining stance might drive Chinese miners to other nations.
Motevallizadeh demanded strict restrictions to prevent a massive influx of mining companies and currency minting equipment from the People’s Republic of China into Iran, saying: “Lower electricity costs make Iran attractive to Chinese miners. They are likely to start smuggling mining equipment into the country”.
In Iran, digital currencies have grown in popularity, with many Iranians investing, despite increasing prices during the preceding year. Crypto mining has also been stimulated by modest, subsidized power, and the Islamic Republic recognized it as a lawful economic activity in the late spring of 2019. Iran’s importance as a mining location has grown, as evidenced by an examination.
Invasion of Chinese Miners
According to the Financial Tribune, Iran has awarded 50 grants to mining companies. While the Ministry of Industries, Mining, and Trade inspected 30 permitted crypto farms in late June. That was after the division said in April that miners will be charged 16,574 rials ($0.39) per kilowatt-hour. It is four times the base cost. And that some of them may be forced to go underground or perhaps bankrupt. Rafsanjan, Iran’s largest permitted mining hub, is owned and controlled by the Chinese.
With record-high temperatures boosting electricity interest. The energy-intensive minting of digital currency was noted as one of the major drivers of power shortages and outages around the country this late spring. In May, the Iranian authorities announced that even authorized miners would be shut off during long periods of low usage. Meanwhile, Tavanir has been investigating illegal mining activities and has seized over 200,000 pieces of equipment in the last several months. According to the power utility cases, the hardware has used an estimated 750 megawatts of electricity, which is enough to power five provinces.