N China’s Inner Mongolia seeks to shut down all virtual currency mining by end of April

N China’s Inner Mongolia seeks to shut down all virtual currency mining by end of April

North China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region will eliminate virtual currency mining by the end of April, according to local market regulator’s latest draft policy.

Apart from banning all mining projects of virtual currencies, the local authority in Inner Mongolia has also banned setting up any new virtual currencies mines, according to the new draft policy.

The draft will be open to comment from February 25 to March 3.

North China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region is one of the areas with the most virtual currency mines, due to its cheap cost in electricity. Other parts of China, such as Southwest China’s Yunnan Province and Sichuan Province, are also home to a concentrated number of virtual current mines.

Analysts said eliminating virtual currency mining will help Inner Mongolia meet its goal of reducing energy consumption level per GDP by 3 percent. Inner Mongolia has set the goal of containing total energy consumption added in 2021 within around 5 million standard coal, and limit the total consumption growth by around 1.9 percent.

The fate of the virtual currencies mining industry has been hanging in the balance in China after the government banned initial coin offerings around mid-2017, leading to the shutdown of a number of bitcoin platforms in the country. Crypto token mining gradually flourished since about 2013 when many digital currency mining companies came to China to take advantage of cheap cost in electricity, especially in some southwestern regions.

Recent market speculation has emerged as to whether the government will ease policy controls on the crypto token mining industry, especially after the National Development and Reform Commission removed bitcoin mining from a list it drafted in early 2019 that listed industries it wanted to eliminate.

A worker checks on Bitcoin mining equipment at a facility in the Garze Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Southwest China’s Sichuan Province. File photo: VCG

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