Report: Iran may reap upward of $1 billion in annual Bitcoin mining revenues

Published at: May 21, 2021

While Iran’s regulatory relationship with Bitcoin runs hot and cold, a new report from blockchain analytics firm Elliptic indicates that regulated mining activities may be driving upwards of $1 billion in revenues and helping the country evade economic sanctions imposed by the United States.

An excerpt of the report published today points to research indicating that Iran currently accounts for 4.5% of total global Bitcoin mining operations, earning the state hundreds of billions which have been used to circumvent the oil embargo in particular.

“The US imposes an almost total economic embargo on Iran, including a ban on all Iranian imports and sanctions on Iranian financial institutions,” reads the report. “Oil exports have plummeted 70% over the past decade, leaving the country in a deep recession with soaring unemployment and periods of civil unrest.”

“In the face of these sanctions, Iran has turned to an unlikely solution - Bitcoin mining.”

The report notes that cheap, abundant oil means that energy-intensive mining operations are comparatively inexpensive for Iran. As such, foreign investors, especially from China, are playing a key role in the country’s expanding crypto economy — sometimes with the assistance of the Iranian military.

“Several Chinese businesses have been granted mining licenses and have established operations in the country. These companies have described establishing good relationships with ‘the army in Iran’, and one particularly large facility in the Rafsanjan Special Economic Zone was reportedly built in collaboration with a ‘military organization’,” the report says.

Ultimately, these state-sanctioned mines produce Bitcoin which can then be used to help the country sell its oil by proxy: excess energy and oil is used to produce Bitcoin, which can then be sold on global markets.

The report also notes that this dynamic “has become all but an official policy.” In late April Iran passed laws that will enable banking entities to purchase imports with cryptocurrencies, and then in May the government appeared to try and strengthen its grip on crypto with a law banning the use of foreign-mined BTC for imports.

Despite now appearing to function as a key part of Iran’s global trade strategy, the official relationship with Bitcoin hasn’t always been so rosy. In January officials tried to place the blame for endemic power outages on illegal mining operations (though experts said that a decrepit power grid was the more likely culprit), and earlier this morning reports emerged that the country is using its intelligence agency to hunt down illegal farms.

Tags
Related Posts
BTC price is up 50% since China ‘selflessly’ banned Bitcoin mining
It’s been 150 days since China banned Bitcoin (BTC) mining — and BTC price action has only benefited as a result. Five months ago, China caused a considerable but not unsurprising stir by doubling down on its hostile environment policy toward cryptocurrency. Bitcoiners to China: Thanks for the ban Just like every “ban” before it, China’s move against miners saw temporary price turbulence, matching the biggest physical upheaval in Bitcoin’s history. As miners powered down and relocated out of China, Bitcoin’s network hash rate fell 50%, with difficulty slowly adjusting for the changes in the months that followed. Since then, …
Bitcoin / Oct. 19, 2021
Bitcoin hash rate rebounds as major miners are coming back online
China’s stringent crypto regulations meant closing shop for many Chinese businesses within the Bitcoin (BTC) mining ecosystem. The sudden disappearance of Bitcoin miners from the grid has resulted in falling hash rates. The hashing performance, the cumulative computing power of the Bitcoin network, dropped from an all-time high of 180 exahashes per second (EH/s) to 84 EH/s in just 21 days. While the hash rate drop was directly attributable to the drop in the number of Chinese miners, Blockchain.com Explorer data suggests there has been a steady increase in mining difficulty since June 3. Since the drop, the hash rate …
Bitcoin / July 29, 2021
Iranian trade ministry issues 30 crypto mining licenses
Iran’s Ministry of Industries, Mining and Trade issued operating licenses for 30 crypto mining centers in the country, the country's Financial Tribue reported last Wednesday. Citing data from the ministry’s website, the report says that Iran’s Semnan Province received the most licenses, with six crypto mining farms now authorized to operate in the region. Alborz Province secured four such licenses, followed by Mazandaran, East Azarbaijan and Zanjan Provinces. Tehran Province, which houses the country’s capital, reportedly received only one license to operate a crypto mining center. The ministry also issued 2,579 establishment permits for new industrial crypto mining units across …
Bitcoin / June 28, 2021
Iran Finalizes Electricity Pricing Scheme for Cryptocurrency Miners
The Iranian Economic Commission has reportedly finalized a tariff scheme for cryptocurrency miners, according to a July 21 report from Iranian economic daily Financial Tribune. Per the report, Energy Minister Homayoon Ha’eri announced that, while the tariff scheme has been finalized, it is awaiting approval from the Cabinet of Iran — a governmental body consisting of various ministers and other officials chosen by the president. While Ha’eri did not elaborate on the exact price scheme, he stated that the price is dependent on market factors such as fuel prices in the Persian Gulf. The head of Iran Electrical Industry Syndicate, …
Bitcoin / July 21, 2019
Crypto and Capitulation — Is there a silver lining? Watch Market Talks on Cointelegraph
On this week’s episode of Market Talks, Cointelegraph welcomes Magdalena Gronowska, co-founder of Citadel 256 and senior consultant at MetaMesh — a blockchain consultancy and building platform. This week, we take a deep dive into everything that is happening in the crypto space — we get Gronowska’s professional take on Sam Bankman-Fried and the whole FTX saga and also BlockFi’s bankruptcy. Bitcoin (BTC) miners have also had a rough few months with profits slowly dipping. What are the odds of most miners shutting down shop and selling their Bitcoin while still making some profit on it, especially since most of …
Bitcoin / Dec. 1, 2022