Norway may hit the pause button on cryptocurrency mining later this year. The government announced Friday it will study whether to impose a provisional ban on mining data centers, arguing that energy and grid capacity should be reserved for more pressing needs.
Officials say the proposal is grounded in the country’s Planning and Building Act, which allows authorities to restrict activities that strain local power resources. The forthcoming review, set for autumn, will assess how much electricity crypto operations consume and whether they pose a growing challenge.
Rising energy costs across Europe—exacerbated by the war in Ukraine and tighter oil-and-gas supplies—have already prompted Norwegian communities to push back against noisy, power-hungry mining sites.
A new registration requirement for data centers, also expected this year, will give regulators a clearer picture of which facilities are engaged in crypto mining and how large they are.
The government has not specified how long a moratorium might last or whether existing mines would be grandfathered in, but officials indicated any freeze would be temporary while they weigh long-term policy options.
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