BTC hash rate slumps amid seasonal miner migration in China

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Analysts are anticipating Bitcoin's second-largest negative difficulty adjustment of the year following the end of Sichuan's rainy season.

Mining data aggregators attribute a slump in Bitcoin's hash rate to the end of the wet season in Sichuan, resulting in many miners migrating to other jurisdictions.

On Oct. 26, Thomas Heller of Bitcoin mining blog Hashr8 reported that roughly 22 exahashes per second of mining power had left the Bitcoin network, coinciding with the end of the season the previous day.

Kevin Zhang of mining-focused Digital Currency Group subsidiary Foundry also estimated a 20 EH/s drop, noting the seven-day average for Bitcoin's hashrate was 132.9 EH/s while daily hash rate concurrently tagged 112.9 EH/s.

Blockchain.com estimates Bitcoin's hash rate to have fallen from 151.1 EH/s on Oct. 24 to 116.3 EH/s the following day.

The province of Sichuan is one of the world's largest hubs for mining activity.

Miners flock there to take advantage of cheap hydro-electricity during the rainy season and then just as quickly leave.

The most recent data from the University of Cambridge's Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index estimates the province represented 18.5% of global hash rate as of April 2020 - which was double the rate prior to the rainy season.

Heller predicted that many miners operating in Sichuan were n relocating overseas or to the provinces of Xinjian or Inner Mongolia, which represented 30.1% and 7.7% of global hash power in April respectively.

CoinShares data published during December 2019 estimated Sichuan represents 54% of global mining activity.

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