The Ethereum Merge Proved a 99% Energy Cut Was Possible. Bitcoin Has Not Followed.
On September 15, 2022, the Ethereum blockchain completed a transition from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake validation — an event the network called the Merge. Ethereum had predicted the switch would reduce its energy consumption by approximately 99.5%. Outside analyses broadly confirmed that prediction. It was the largest demonstration in the history of cryptocurrency that the energy intensity of blockchain operation is an architectural choice, not a physical constraint.
Proof-of-stake replaces the computational race with a stake-weighted validation system. Participants lock up cryptocurrency as collateral — their stake — and the right to validate transactions and earn fees is allocated in proportion to the amount staked rather than the amount of computing power deployed. There is no puzzle, no hashing race, no escalating hardware arms race. The energy required to operate the network drops by orders of magnitude because validators are not burning electricity to outcompete each other; they are simply maintaining a running process on modest hardware.
The tradeoff is structural. Proof-of-stake concentrates influence among those with the largest holdings, which critics argue undermines the decentralized character that gives cryptocurrency its rationale. Validators with the most stake validate the most transactions and earn the most fees, reinforcing their relative position. Whether this represents an acceptable design compromise depends on what one believes cryptocurrency is actually for.
Bitcoin has not followed Ethereum’s path and shows no meaningful signs of doing so. The Bitcoin community treats proof-of-work as foundational to the protocol’s security model, and any change requires consensus among miners — precisely the constituency that would lose its revenue stream in a transition. The Merge demonstrated that a cleaner approach exists. Bitcoin’s continued operation under proof-of-work is now a choice the network is making, knowingly, every day.