{"id":387455,"date":"2023-04-22T10:49:39","date_gmt":"2023-04-22T10:49:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/insidebitcoins.com\/?p=387455"},"modified":"2023-04-22T10:49:39","modified_gmt":"2023-04-22T10:49:39","slug":"solana-going-green-with-real-time-data-on-network-carbon-emissions","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/insidebitcoins.com\/news\/solana-going-green-with-real-time-data-on-network-carbon-emissions","title":{"rendered":"Solana going green with real-time data on network carbon emissions"},"content":{"rendered":"
We have been hearing quite a bit recently on the environment and sustainability. It seems that almost every other day some environmental issue is being reported on, but at the same time, we hear about positive developments. One such development comes from a beloved coin among investors, Solana<\/a>.<\/p>\n The Solana Foundation stated today that Solana is now monitoring data relevant to its carbon emissions in real-time. It is “a major smart contract blockchain network” that claims it is a first-of-its-kind action. The code that drives NFT projects and decentralized apps (Dapps) is stored in smart contracts.<\/p>\n They are reporting that starting today, Solana will routinely update a dedicated dashboard with statistics tracking the network’s main environmental indicators, including its network power intensity, energy usage and carbon footprint. The dashboard will be updated only every two weeks, but it gathers real-time data from software placed on Solana validator nodes.<\/p>\n This is very positive news to all those conscious of the environmental impacts of cryptocurrency<\/a>. Later in this article, we will discuss other exciting initiatives in this sector, such as the new project Ecoterra, which is currently in pre-sale. For now, let’s see what Solana has unveiled.<\/p>\n The emissions tracker, created in partnership with carbon data platform Trycarbonara, collects statistics from on-chain data as well as information that was gathered directly from a sample of Solana validators. In comparison to earlier relied-upon estimates, the more detailed data, which monitors each validator’s geographic location and the times they are online and offline, provides a significantly more accurate evaluation of Solana’s energy use.<\/p>\n Policy Lead Amira Valliani said in an interview with Decrypt,<\/p>\n I would love for this to become an industry standard. We ought to be upfront about how emissions seem. You may choose how you use a chain intentionally if you are aware of what is happening at the blockchain level as a user.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n <\/p>\n Blockchain networks, which may consume enormous amounts of energy to create new tokens and support on-chain transactions, have long been a contentious topic. It is an often-cited argument by crypto detractors against cryptocurrency<\/a> adoption.<\/p>\n In the case of Solana Foundation, which is responsible for the decentralized Solana<\/a> network’s well-being, they believe that the problem needs to be acknowledged in order for there to be hope in addressing it.<\/p>\n Members of the foundation believe that by setting an example and being upfront about their network’s climate impact, other networks will follow suit and this will alter how crypto users perceive their relationship to the environment.<\/p>\n For example, according to recent research, pollution created by software and computers—a sector in which crypto-related outputs play a significant role—accounts for about twice as much pollution as that produced by the whole aviation industry, although maybe being less visually harmful.<\/p>\n However, for all cryptocurrency<\/a> users to have access to such data, most significant blockchain networks will need to actively participate in the disclosure of their carbon footprint. Analysts are able to quantify a blockchain’s environmental effect thanks to publicly available on-chain data. However, without information provided voluntarily by members of specific networks, those estimations may eventually be incorrect.<\/p>\n According to Hayagriv Sridharan, co-founder and CEO of Trycarbonara,<\/p>\n That data is frequently either underestimated or overestimated, but there is never certainty around it. The data will not be as accurate or useful as when we have stronger collaboration, even if we can model any blockchain without its foundation’s help.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Sridharan is hopeful that further blockchains will emulate Solana and offer such assistance. The fact that users of proof-of-work networks like Bitcoin, which frequently consume far more energy than proof-of-stake networks like Solana and Ethereum, are ready to willingly subject their way of life to more scrutiny by environmentalists, however, might complicate matters.<\/p>\n Proof-of-stake blockchains enable validators to validate on-chain transactions and create new cryptocurrencies as a result of their substantial cryptocurrency deposits (or stakes) into the network. Proof-of-work blockchains, on the other hand, demand miners to process transactions by focusing massive amounts of computer power at challenging problems, with winners receiving fresh cryptocurrency.<\/p>\n Not long ago, Ethereum<\/a> switched from the energy intensive Proof-of-Work to Proof-of-Stake.<\/p>\n Trycarbonara estimates that a single Bitcoin transaction uses 5.79 million times as much energy than a proof-of-stake Solana transaction. The difficulty of these puzzles—and the energy needed to answer them—is only rising as reward supplies of proof-of-work cryptocurrencies<\/a> like Bitcoin get more and more constrained.<\/p>\n A law limiting Bitcoin miners’ capacity to draw electricity from the unstable Texas energy system during demand surges was approved by the Texas Senate last week. In order to evaluate the harmful environmental impacts of cryptocurrency mining, a county in North Carolina is considering a one-year moratorium.<\/p>\n Since Ethereum’s successful “merge” in the fall of last year, which switched the network from its long-standing proof-of-work methodology to proof-of-stake, some of the criticism over the environmental effect of cryptocurrencies has subsided. The Crypto Carbon Ratings Institute estimates that the action reduced Ethereum’s projected carbon footprint by more than 99.99%.<\/p>\n The larger argument, though, recently resurfaced when a contentious New York Times piece looked at the impact Bitcoin mining has on the environment. The article was criticized as “false and misleading,” “politically-driven,” and a “hit piece” that served as a “monument of intellectual laziness,” according to the critics.<\/p>\n Some proponents of Bitcoin assert that such studies ignore the volume of renewable energy utilized to mine the currency or what they perceive to be a beneficial effect on grid stability. Other cryptocurrency proponents point out that centralized sectors do not disclose their energy use, making it difficult to make an accurate comparison to, say, the footprint of IT giants or the conventional banking system.<\/p>\n It is obvious that both sides of the argument still find the subject to be delicate. But a tracker like Solana’s is a start in the right direction for more accuracy and openness in energy reporting in the Web3 era. However, it will be left to individual cryptocurrency<\/a> users to determine what effect it will have.<\/p>\n In the area of green cryptocurrencies, a project worth mentioning is Ecoterra, a new presale crypto aiming to solve climate change issues using blockchain tech, ‘Recycle2Earn’, and carbon credits. This project is one of the best ways to earn free crypto, all while helping the environment.<\/p>\n As mankind works to lessen the effects of climate change and environmental deterioration, recycling is both an ecological requirement and a financial opportunity.<\/p>\n Ecoterra is developing a system to reward recyclers and a system to encourage ecological action actions that benefit our environment in order to assist in achieving those goals.<\/p>\n The most crucial component of the ecosystem is the recycle2earn app from Ecoterra. Users of the smartphone app have access to the platform’s three primary pillars: the markets for recycled materials and carbon offsets, as well as the impact profile, which tracks ecological acts.<\/p>\n In a recent AMA on Coinsniper, ecoterra CEO Mihai Ciutureanu gave his audience an explanation of some of the design choices made for the project, how it would operate, and what will be done with the money raised from investors.<\/p>\n More information regarding the market for recycled materials was given by the CEO.<\/p>\n According to Ciutureanu,<\/p>\n The Recycled Materials Marketplace serves as a platform that connects businesses in need of recycled materials with recycling businesses providing those resources. The marketplace makes sure that the products posted are in line with the precise requirements of purchasers by utilizing a sophisticated screening mechanism.<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n Payments may be made using other cryptocurrencies<\/a> or $ECOTERRA tokens, and for better transparency, the purchase history may be linked into a company’s trackable profile.<\/p>\nEnormous energy costs<\/h2>\n
The Proof-of-Work vs Proof-of-Stake controversy<\/h2>\n
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Ecoterra – a new green cryptocurrency<\/h2>\n
Ecoterra’s CEO Mihai Ciutureanu on the Market for Recyclable Materials’ Filtering System<\/h2>\n