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Been seeing a lot of chatter on X about Iran conflict potentially tanking Bitcoin's hashrate, with some wild predictions about billions in BTC getting dumped and hundreds of thousands of rigs going offline. But talking to folks actually in the mining space, the reality seems way less dramatic.
Wolfie Zhao from TheMinerMag put it pretty simply—he doesn't think Iran's mining disruption is a major concern for Bitcoin at all. The thing is, Iran's actually a pretty small player in global mining. Most estimates put their share in the low single digits, with some saying it's below 1%. That's nowhere near the scale of what happened during China's 2021 crackdown.
Ethan Vera from Luxor Technology was even more direct: even if Iranian mining completely stopped tomorrow, it wouldn't materially impact Bitcoin block times or network security. Zero impact. The miners there are mostly small private operations and some legacy Chinese companies, not exactly the backbone of global hashrate.
Now, the social media narrative was pretty compelling—people were throwing around numbers like 2-5% of global hashrate potentially going dark, with one tweet claiming 427,000 rigs could disappear overnight if the regime fell. But looking at actual hashrate data, Bitcoin actually rebounded pretty quickly. We saw it dip after the initial U.S.-Israeli attacks on February 28 when hashrate was around 986 EH/s, then it spiked to 1.1361 ZH/s by March 1. By Tuesday morning it settled just under 1 ZH/s. That's not exactly a supply shock.
What's interesting is that Iran's crypto ecosystem has become pretty significant—Chainalysis estimated their broader crypto economy hit $7.78 billion in 2025. A lot of it's tied to state-linked entities and serves as a workaround for international sanctions. So there's definitely economic impact there, and Elliptic did report that outgoing transaction volumes from Iranian exchanges spiked 700% right after the attacks.
But here's the thing: that's more about price sentiment and capital flight than actual network disruption. The conflict creates volatility, sure, but it's not a fundamental supply network risk like some people were claiming. Iran's mining infrastructure has always faced structural challenges anyway—unstable power, high import costs, regulatory headaches. Even when it was legalized in 2019, growth has been limited.
So yeah, the geopolitical situation is real and worth watching, but the Bitcoin network itself? Pretty resilient to this particular shock. The real story is more about how crypto serves as an alternative financial channel for countries outside the dollar system, not about hashrate collapse.