Crypto Mining Products Are Blossoming In Europe With GreenHashes

CoingapePublished on 2022-03-24Last updated on 2022-03-24

Abstract

Mining is the process of adding new blocks to the blockchain. For the system to function, someone must add new transactions into blocks, and then attach them to the blockchain. This process is called mining.

Nowadays, you can hardly find a single crypto-enthusiast or a person aiming to get a quick profit on cryptocurrency who would not think about mining as a way to increase their capital: you invest in equipment, and it brings you profit. However, after a series of reforms and bans on mining around the world, starting from China, big miners start their way to Europe. The main goal was to find convenient places for their data centers and cheap electricity.
Mining is the process of adding new blocks to the blockchain. For the system to function, someone must add new transactions into blocks, and then attach them to the blockchain. This process is called mining.
You can do mining alone – it involves working on your own or renting equipment. This means that your device automatically is trying to “solve the problem” and add a new block. If this can be achieved, all proceeds go to you. Solo mining was relevant until 2013 – now the competition and complexity are so high that it is impossible to make money doing mining alone.
The disadvantage of classical mining is impracticality: one ASIC makes very loud noises compared to a washing machine, and the heat generated is enough to heat a room of 150-180 square meters. Repair and maintenance of equipment are often the reasons why mining becomes unprofitable.
In recent years, there were many environmental issues, which threaten the entire industry: mining consumes too many resources. According to the University of Cambridge, Bitcoin may already account for more than 0.6% of the world’s electricity demand. In recent months, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Iran, and Norway have experienced power outages due to mining.
“The European Union needs to ban the energy-intensive mode of crypto mining based on the Proof-of-Work mechanism,” said the vice-chairman of the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA).
The regulator emphasized that it does not encourage a complete ban of cryptocurrencies, but rather tries to encourage the industry to switch to more efficient technologies.
Amid the expensive equipment and incredibly high electricity bills, the optimal solution has emerged – cloud mining. In this case, the user simply rents capacities from the remote data centers. The company provides equipment maintenance, and miners pay a commission from income for this.
Some companies take mining to a whole new level in Europe and extract cryptocurrency using renewable sources: sun, wind, and water. Thanks to the long-standing efforts of experts in this field, cloud mining has not only become a profitable way of earning money but has also begun to change public and government opinion. A continuous flow of investment in these areas along with large investors began to develop the crypto industry in Europe, allowing more and more people to try cloud mining from anywhere in the world. All you need is a device and internet access.
One of the notable representatives of “green” cloud mining is GreenHashes company. These guys have made a revolution by launching one of the first large data centers by using completely renewable energy sources. More and more European investors have begun to pay attention to cloud mining thanks to the efforts of this big team.
Today, everyone can try this type of crypto mining: all you need is just register an account on the GreenHashes website, choose one of many contracts (you can start with a minimum amount ( which is a big advantage) – you don’t need to buy the expensive processors or video cards, it’s enough to rent needed capacities at very competitive prices). As soon as your contract is activated, you can track the number of mined coins from your account. Payment is made in bitcoin – it allows everyone to join the team.

Related Reads

The Rally That Wasn't

The article analyzes Bitcoin's sharp decline amid a shift in macroeconomic expectations, with strong US job data leading markets to price out Fed rate cuts. Bitcoin fell 13% to around $67,000, triggering significant outflows from US spot ETFs and indicating institutional de-risking. On-chain data confirms a bearish structure. Price has dropped back into the "bear market range," with the Short-Term Holder Cost Basis falling below a key mean level—a pattern last seen in early 2022. The profitability bias has collapsed, with loss realization now dominating, mirroring a panic wave from February. Recent buyers who accumulated near the $82k top are under pressure, and loss realization is accelerating across both short-term and long-term holder cohorts. Off-chain, the rally failed at the aggregate US ETF cost basis near $83k, turning it into resistance. Spot market demand has deteriorated sharply, with sellers dominating order books. While a major long liquidation event cleared over $400M in leverage, spot buyers have not returned to absorb supply. Options markets show sustained demand for downside protection (elevated put premiums) but not panic, with volatility premiums near three-month highs. The conclusion is that the market remains fragile, with overhead supply from trapped ETF investors, weak spot demand, and accelerating losses. Without a return of spot buying and a reclaim of key cost bases, Bitcoin is vulnerable to further downside within the prevailing bear market structure.

insights.glassnode3h ago

The Rally That Wasn't

insights.glassnode3h ago

Trading

Spot
Futures
活动图片