The difficulty of mining bitcoin has increased by 15% to 144.4 trillion. Since 2021, when the mining prohibition in China caused a significant disturbance, the percentage growth is the highest.
The difficulty of mining a new block on the network is gauged via difficulty adjustments. To guarantee that blocks are generated approximately every ten minutes, irrespective of variations in the hashrate, it recalibrates every 2,016 blocks, or nearly every two weeks.
Following a decrease in the bitcoin hashrate (the total amount of computing power protecting the network), the adjustment comes after a 12% drop in difficulty. A severe winter storm in the United States led several major operators to reduce operations, resulting in the biggest decline in mining activity since late 2021.
The hashrate peaked at 1.1 zettahash per second (ZH/s) in October, the same month that bitcoin hit an all-time high of almost $126,500. The hashrate decreased to 826 exahash per second (EH/s) in February when prices dropped as low as $60,000. Since then, the price has increased to about $67,000 and the hashrate has recovered to 1 ZH/s.
Profitability is being squeezed at the same time as hashprice, the expected daily revenue miners make per unit of hashrate, stays near multi-year lows ($23.9 PH/s).
Large-scale miners with access to inexpensive energy continue to mine intensively in spite of this strain on profitability. One example is the United Arab Emirates, which has over $344 million in unrealised mining profits.
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