Ethereum hashrate reaches record highs, after consolidation announced by China

Ethereum

In May 2021, Beijing renewed efforts to regulate the cryptocurrency industry in China. Citing the poor state of the environment and the need to save electricity, which is, after all, crucial for mining cryptocurrencies, the Chinese government banned the practice of mining and exchanging digital tokens. This has caused a migration of miners from China to other parts of the world, as well as a decline in the value of major cryptocurrencies: Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH) or Cardano (ADA). Despite this, Ethereum’s hashrate has recently reached new records. So what is currently happening in the market?

What is hashrate?

Hashrate is a measure of computing power per second used during mining. In other words, hashrate is the speed at which tokens are mined in a given blockchain. It is measured in units of hash/second, which means how many calculations per second can be performed in one second. 

Ethereum (ETH) hashrate records

Ethereum’s record hashrate was 715.4 TH/sec and was recorded in September 2021. For comparison, the previous record was 632.8 TH/s and was measured on May 19, 2021. The new record reaching over 715 TH/s indicates that miners have already completed the migration process after China’s restructuring of the law.

But it wasn’t just China’s actions that raised questions in this case. The Ethereum network recently underwent changes that were necessary for its further development. This, of course, refers to the London hard fork that was implemented in early August 2021. This hard fork led to the migration of Ethereum from proof-of-work (PoW) to Proof-of-Stake (PoS).

Many believed that with the Ethereum upgrade, there was a massive retreat to other related networks such as Solana. However, contrary to assumptions, Ethereum miners have remained loyal to this ecosystem and are constantly engaged in mining new tokens. This is not surprising when you consider the growing demand for NFT tokens and decentralized applications from the DeFi sector.

Revival of not only Ethereum

All indications are that after the repression that China faced, miners are slowly starting to revive and mine tokens again, and not only from the Ethereum network. In fact, recently we can observe an increase in the hashrate of the most popular blockchain to date – Bitcoin (BTC). So it seems that a more convenient place to mine cryptocurrencies has been found.

Disclaimer: Blockbulletin does not take accountability of investments based on the information of the website. We highly advice readers to make extensive research prior to any invest

Share this article

More news

All articles loaded
No more articles to load

Learn

Bitcoin blocks

What are Bitcoin blocks?

Bitcoin (BTC) is currently one of the most popular digital currencies in the world. How does it differ from the…
Bitcoin forks

Bitcoin forks

Bitcoin’s history, although short, is quite bumpy. The reason for this is not only the dynamic price movements or the…
Ripple

What is XRP?

XRP is one of the top cryptocurrencies on the market. A project with a long and also quite controversial history…
What is Vechain VET

What is Vechain (VET)

The next cryptocurrency we take under the microscope is VeChain (VET). We will take a look at what sets it…
what is uniswap uni

What is Uniswap (UNI)?

In the article titled “What is Binance Coin (BNB),” we illustrated an exchange that, for the purpose of its business,…
Terra LUNA

What is Terra (LUNA)?

This time we take a look at another project that dived deep into the hearts of investors. What exactly is…
What is Stellar Lumens XLM

What is Stellar Lumens (XLM)

Some projects in the cryptocurrency world, although independent, are interrelated. One example is Litecoin, commonly referred to as Bitcoin’s little…
All articles loaded
No more articles to load

Analyses

All articles loaded
No more articles to load

Latest news

All articles loaded
No more articles to load