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Going ‘Negative’—The Bitcoin Price Worst-Case Scenario Explained

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Bitcoin BTC and cryptocurrencies have suffered a catastrophic price crash over the last year—with 2023 already off to a tricky start.

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The bitcoin price has dropped to under $17,000 per bitcoin, down from almost $70,000 in late 2021 (though one viral memecoin has rocketed into the new year).

Now, as serious survival fears swirl around some of the world's biggest bitcoin and crypto companies, geopolitical strategist Peter Zeihan has outlined how the bitcoin price could fall below zero.

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Bitcoin "serves no purpose, it's not a store of value, it's not a medium of exchange and as we've seen if you want to decentralize outside of government control it's a haven for fraud," Zeihan, author of The Accidental Superpower, told podcaster Joe Rogan.

"[Crypto] is now in the process of going to zero except for bitcoin which will probably go negative because if we're moving into a world with carbon taxes you have to take into account the energy to produce it in the first place."

Bitcoin is "now starting to be priced appropriately," Zeihan said. The bitcoin price "has another $17,000 to go down. There's no intrinsic value to this product."

The bitcoin blockchain, a distributed digital ledger, is maintained by so-called miners who use powerful, energy-demanding computers to secure the network in return for bitcoins.

After China expelled bitcoin miners in 2021, the U.S. became the world's largest bitcoin mining country, contributing around 38% of the so-called bitcoin hash rate according to the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index.

Bitcoin mining uses eye-watering amounts of energy to power and cool computers, consuming as much electricity in 2022 as the whole of Sweden, according to Digiconomist's Bitcoin Energy Consumption Index.

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While renewable energy sources make up nearly 40% of bitcoin’s energy consumption, the Bitcoin Energy Consumption Index puts the bitcoin network's carbon footprint at the same level as Hong Kong.

Carbon taxes have been introduced by countries around the world in recent years as they try to reduce their CO2 emissions. In June last year, Danish lawmakers agreed the highest corporate carbon tax in Europe. However, the U.S. doesn’t have a carbon tax at a national level, with the Biden administration regarding the idea as politically risky and hard to get through Congress.

Despite bitcoin's price crash over the last year, many remain convinced the price will eventually roar back with Mark Cuban, the billionaire Shark Tank star and bitcoin critic-turned-crypto investor, revealing when he'd buy bitcoin again.

"Bitcoin became an ideology," Zeihan said. "People who really like bitcoin are convinced it's the currency of the future, the decentralized ledger is the way to go, that anything is controlled by a government entity is by definition a negative and if it's done by the private sector it will be better, but that's just not how currency works."

Bitcoin's scarcity, with a fixed supply of around 21 million bitcoins that makes it comparable to digital gold, is named by bitcoin bulls as why it's superior to government-backed so-called fiat currencies that can be created by central banks.

"One of the craziest things about bitcoin is that there will never be more than X number of units of bitcoin [because] by default that means it can't be used for trade," Zeihan said. "The whole idea of economic activity is that there's expansion which means you need more currency to lubricate and manage that expansion. If currency is locked into a specific number you get monetary inflation and that's one of the fastest ways to destroy an economic model."

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