The U.S. Department of Energy just greenlit $2.7 billion in funding for uranium enrichment infrastructure. While it sounds like nuclear tech news, there's a deeper angle here—energy policy directly shapes mining economics. When governments commit serious capital to uranium and grid infrastructure, it signals longer-term thinking about energy supply. For the crypto sector, especially proof-of-work networks, this matters. Cheaper, more stable energy access could reshape mining profitability across regions. Worth watching how this plays out in the energy-intensive blockchain space.
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quietly_staking
· 01-08 22:15
Energy policy is indeed an invisible hand in crypto mining; pouring 2.7B into it feels very promising.
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MEV_Whisperer
· 01-08 21:07
2.7 billion invested in uranium mine infrastructure, in plain terms, it's still paving the way for miners.
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orphaned_block
· 01-05 22:51
Hey, the energy costs are really about to loosen up now, BTC miners should be happy.
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MidsommarWallet
· 01-05 22:43
Damn, 2.7 billion invested in uranium. Now the miners are going to celebrate, as energy costs drop and everything changes.
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GateUser-6bc33122
· 01-05 22:39
Damn, 2.7 billion invested in uranium enrichment... miners are probably going to be over the moon.
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POAPlectionist
· 01-05 22:31
Really? The US is investing 2.7 billion in uranium mines, so won't BTC miners have to pay higher electricity costs again?
The U.S. Department of Energy just greenlit $2.7 billion in funding for uranium enrichment infrastructure. While it sounds like nuclear tech news, there's a deeper angle here—energy policy directly shapes mining economics. When governments commit serious capital to uranium and grid infrastructure, it signals longer-term thinking about energy supply. For the crypto sector, especially proof-of-work networks, this matters. Cheaper, more stable energy access could reshape mining profitability across regions. Worth watching how this plays out in the energy-intensive blockchain space.