Can cryptocurrencies adapt to environmental concerns and rule changes?

Europe and the United States are both working on regulating digital assets.
Europe and the United States are both working on regulating digital assets. Copyright Alesia Kozik from Pexels via Canva
Copyright Alesia Kozik from Pexels via Canva
By Euronews and Reuters
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Experts warn evolving rules, environmental concerns and competition from central banks threaten to undermine many of the world's fast-growing crypto assets.

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Evolving rules, environmental concerns and competition from central banks threaten to undermine many of the world's fast-growing crypto assets, experts warn.

But cryptocurrencies are creating opportunities for those able to adapt.

Europe and the United States are both working on regulating digital assets and their providers - moves welcomed by investors, who hope the new ground rules will encourage institutional investors to plunge in.

Anatoly Crachilov, co-founder and CEO of Nickel Digital Asset Management told the Reuters Global Markets Forum that regulatory uncertainty was a drag on the development of the crypto space.

He described the promise by the US Securities and Exchange Commission's new Chairman Gary Gensler, to provide "guidance and clarity" to the market during his confirmation hearing in March, as a turning point.

Challenging Bitcoin

For its part, the European Commission's proposed "Markets in Crypto-assets," or MiCA regulation, will regulate crypto-assets and their service providers in the European Union.

"It will be a new banking sector, with passporting possibilities," digital asset trading solutions company H-Finance CEO Vytautas Zabulis said, referring to the prospect of EU-wide cryptocurrency trading licences.

Alongside the evolving regulatory framework, some countries, including China, Britain and Russia, are considering launching their own central bank digital currencies (CBDCs).

That is likely to be followed by legislation to tax gains, said Robert Carnell, chief economist and head of research at ING Asia. "That may be the death knell for these other cryptocurrencies, though central bank coins are on the up and up," he said.

Zabulis said that if CBDCs were developed in a way that they were "easy to interact with," most digital currencies used for settlements will likely lose both their goal and value.

There was not a big argument for bitcoin becoming a settlement tool, Zabulis cautioned. "Blockchain technology is for that, so, CBDCs will be built on blockchain."

Bitcoin BTC=BTSP traded around $54,000 (€44,500) following a 10 per cent surge on Monday, driven by reports that JPMorgan Chase JPM.N is planning to offer a managed Bitcoin fund.

CBDCs are expected to have a limited impact on Bitcoin in particular, due to its progressively limited supply, Crachilov said.

"No central bank currency, however digital, can offer scarcity at this stage, as its supply can be inflated by a respective central bank issuing entity," Crachilov said.

If China saw Bitcoin as a threat to its own planned digital currency, that could affect the whole industry, Zabulis said.

The environmental 'revolution'

Creating crypto assets leaves a heavy carbon footprint, and is being increasingly seen as environmentally unsustainable.

ING Asia's Carnell said there was "a strong argument on environmental grounds for limiting crypto mining or at least having them offset their wasteful practices".

However, Bitcoin enthusiast Raoul Pal said he was not worried about the "unsustainability narrative".

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Pal, founder and CEO of on-demand financial TV channel Real Vision, said he believed it would drive a "green revolution" because in the end that was "the only way to win".

Nickel Digital's Crachilov said his fund was seeing a higher demand for ESG-compliant cryptos, which are initiatives for more sustainable methods.

"The price competition drives miners towards the cheapest sources of energy -- renewables are increasingly falling into this category," he said.

Blockchain upgrade Ethereum 2 will use "proof of stake versus proof of work," H-Finance's Zabulis said. "It means that it will drastically reduce the energy needed" to mine it.

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