cryptonews
February 4, 2026 2:30 PM UTC

Russia Targets 50,000 Miners as Crypto Mining Banned in 13 Regions

Russia has moved to shut down crypto mining operations across 13 regions, targeting an estimated 50,000 miners in what amounts to the most sweeping enforcement action since the country legalized the activity in August 2024. The bans, extending through 2031 during peak autumn-winter seasons, signal that Moscow’s tolerance for grid-straining mining has hit a structural limit, not just a seasonal one. The immediate pressure is energy: affected Siberian regions are reporting shortfalls of nearly 3,000 MW on the Unified Energy System grid, driven largely by miners exploiting cheap, heavily subsidized local electricity. That’s not a rounding error – it’s a grid crisis, and Russian officials are treating it as one. Key Takeaways: Ban Scope: Mining restrictions now cover 10 active regions – including Irkutsk Oblast, parts of Buryatia and Zabaikalsky Krai, six North Caucasus republics, and Russian-occupied Ukrainian territories – with seasonal bans running through 2031. Affected Miners: An estimated 50,000 operators face enforcement, with major firm BitRiver among the hardest hit due to its reliance on Irkutsk’s low-cost power infrastructure. Energy Context: Power shortfalls in Siberian regions have reached nearly 3,000 MW, with miners blamed for exploiting subsidized electricity at grid-destabilizing scale. Escalation Path: Year-round bans in southern Buryatia and Zabaikalsky Krai take effect January 1, 2026, moving beyond seasonal restrictions into permanent operational prohibition. What to Watch: A government commission on the electric power sector is expected to convene soon to finalize expanded year-round bans; potential amnesty programs in the North Caucasus could redirect illegal miners toward licensed operations. Discover: Top Crypto Presales to Watch Before They Launch What the Russia Crypto Mining Ban Actually Does – and Why the Regional Selection Matters The mechanics are straightforward: registered and unregistered miners in covered regions are prohibited from operating during designated periods, with enforcement escalating to include FSB agents, drones, and surveillance technology in areas like Kabardino-Balkaria, where illegal operations hidden in abandoned buildings caused over 1 billion rubles ($13 million) in utility damages in 2025 alone. The regional selection isn’t arbitrary. Irkutsk Oblast faces a full-year ban – its southern areas were already restricted earlier in 2025, freeing up 320 MW – because it anchors the cheap-power arbitrage that made Siberia a global mining hub in the first place. The North Caucasus republics (Dagestan, North Ossetia-Alania, Ingushetia, Chechnya, Kabardino-Balkaria, and Karachay-Cherkessia) are included because illegal mining there has metastasized beyond regulatory reach. Photo: Dagestan The inclusion of occupied Ukrainian territories – Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson – reflects Moscow’s intent to consolidate energy control in those regions rather than tolerate gray-market extraction. Power officials in Buryatia welcomed the year-round bans, with TASS and Kommersant reporting officials cited relief from “serious” shortages. The Industrial Mining Association took the opposite view, stating the restrictions “reduce [Southern Siberia’s] attractiveness to investors” and leave miners “vulnerable.” Both reactions are accurate – which is precisely what makes this ban structurally significant rather than cosmetic. 50,000 Miners Offline – What That Means for Global Hash Rate Russia currently accounts for roughly 5% of global Bitcoin hash rate, according to Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance data – a share built almost entirely on the cheap, subsidized electricity now being clawed back. Displacing 50,000 operators from that base doesn’t evaporate hash rate; it redistributes it, and the redistribution logic points toward the United States, Kazakhstan, and parts of Central Asia as the most likely beneficiaries. That matters because hash rate geography isn’t just a mining industry statistic – it shapes where block rewards flow, which jurisdictions capture mining revenue, and how resilient the network is to coordinated regulatory pressure. Source: Bitcoin Hash Rate / Coinwarz A meaningful contraction in Russian hash rate tightens the global difficulty adjustment modestly in the short term, briefly improving margins for miners elsewhere before difficulty recalibrates. Bitcoin’s broader market performance adds another variable: compressed miner margins in a sideways or declining price environment accelerate the exit of marginal operators, potentially amplifying the hash rate shift beyond what the Russian ban alone would produce. BitRiver – the largest industrial mining operator in Russia, anchored to Irkutsk’s power infrastructure – faces the most acute operational exposure. Its model was built on energy-cost arbitrage that the Russian state is now explicitly dismantling. Explore: Best Crypto Projects With High Growth Potential in 2026 The post Russia Targets 50,000 Miners as Crypto Mining Banned in 13 Regions appeared first on Cryptonews .

ChartModo Newsletter
면책 조항 읽기 : 본 웹 사이트, 하이퍼 링크 사이트, 관련 응용 프로그램, 포럼, 블로그, 소셜 미디어 계정 및 기타 플랫폼 (이하 "사이트")에 제공된 모든 콘텐츠는 제 3 자 출처에서 구입 한 일반적인 정보 용입니다. 우리는 정확성과 업데이트 성을 포함하여 우리의 콘텐츠와 관련하여 어떠한 종류의 보증도하지 않습니다. 우리가 제공하는 컨텐츠의 어떤 부분도 금융 조언, 법률 자문 또는 기타 용도에 대한 귀하의 특정 신뢰를위한 다른 형태의 조언을 구성하지 않습니다. 당사 콘텐츠의 사용 또는 의존은 전적으로 귀하의 책임과 재량에 달려 있습니다. 당신은 그들에게 의존하기 전에 우리 자신의 연구를 수행하고, 검토하고, 분석하고, 검증해야합니다. 거래는 큰 손실로 이어질 수있는 매우 위험한 활동이므로 결정을 내리기 전에 재무 고문에게 문의하십시오. 본 사이트의 어떠한 콘텐츠도 모집 또는 제공을 목적으로하지 않습니다.