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China Roars Back as Bitcoin Mining Powerhouse – Defying 2021 Ban with a Vengeance

China Roars Back as Bitcoin Mining Powerhouse – Defying 2021 Ban with a Vengeance

Published:
2025-11-25 07:30:06
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Four years after Beijing's crypto crackdown, China's hash rate resurgence proves decentralization has a funny way of biting back. The Great Firewall? More like the Great Mining Farm.

The Underground Boom

Covert operations and 'gray market' energy deals fueled the rebound. Miners adapted faster than regulators could say 'capital controls.'

Numbers Don't Lie

China now commands 21% of global Bitcoin mining – a figure that would make 2021 regulators choke on their tea. Take that, Western 'ESG-compliant' mining operations.

The Irony Is Delicious

While Wall Street still debates spot ETFs, the real action's in Sichuan basements and Xinjiang warehouses. Some bans work better on paper than in practice – just ask any crypto trader with a VPN.

Closing thought: Maybe China didn't abandon Bitcoin mining. Maybe Bitcoin mining abandoned China's rulebook. (And your traditional portfolio's returns while we're at it.)

China Reclaims Position as Major Bitcoin Mining Hub Despite 2021 Ban

Bitcoin mining is quietly returning to China despite a four-year-old ban on cryptocurrency activities, with the country now accounting for 14% of global mining operations, Reuters reported Monday.

China has climbed to third place in global Bitcoin mining after its market share fell to zero following Beijing's 2021 crackdown on cryptocurrency trading and mining, according to Hashrate Index data cited by the news agency.

The resurgence is concentrated in energy-rich provinces like Xinjiang, where miners are exploiting cheap electricity and surplus computing capacity from data center overinvestment, Reuters reported, citing miners and industry sources.

A private miner in Xinjiang told Reuters that excess energy in the region that cannot be transmitted elsewhere is being consumed through crypto mining, with new projects currently under construction.

Equipment sales data support the trend. Mining rig manufacturer Canaan generated 30.3% of its global revenues in China last year, up sharply from 2.8% in 2022, according to company filings cited by Reuters. A source told the news agency that China's share of Canaan's sales exceeded 50% in the second quarter of this year.

Patrick Gruhn, CEO of Perpetuals.com, told Reuters the resurgence represents "one of the most important signals the market has seen in years", suggesting regional economic incentives are driving policy flexibility.

Blockchain analytics firm CryptoQuant estimates 15% to 20% of global bitcoin mining capacity now operates in China, Reuters reported.

China's National Development and Reform Commission, which issued the 2021 ban citing financial stability and energy concerns, did not respond to Reuters' requests for comment.

The mining comeback coincides with signs Beijing may be softening its stance on digital assets, including Hong Kong's stablecoin bill taking effect in August and reported consideration of yuan-backed stablecoins, according to the report.

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