European Parliament members have voted against a proposed rule that would have effectively banned bitcoin in the EU because of the energy consumption involved in mining the cryptocurrency.
The parliament's economic and monetary affairs committee voted 30-23 to
keep a provision out of the proposed Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA)
framework that required all cryptocurrencies to be subject to the EU’s
“minimum environmental sustainability standards with respect to their
consensus mechanism.”
This would have meant a ban on
proof-of-work mining, which is used by bitcoin, as well as ether and
litecoin. The provision would have required these cryptocurrencies to
phase out their use of proof-of-work and switch to the less
energy-intensive proof-of-stake consensus mechanism.
Proof-of-stake
is already used by most newer cryptos and there are plans for ether to
make the switch this year, but there is no such plan for bitcoin.
While
rejecting the provision, the committee agreed to ask the EC to include
crypto-assets mining in the EU taxonomy for sustainable activities by
2025 to reduce its carbon footprint.
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