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The Mining Mirage: Energy Reform and the Bitcoin Ban in Venezuela - Crypto Economy
Venezuela lives an energy paradox that few countries can boast. It possesses some of the largest hydroelectric reserves in the world, a resource that for decades has been the backbone of its electrical grid. Yet this very source of energy, which could become a magnet for Bitcoin mining, remains forbidden by a government prohibition that seems to clash head‑on with the recent opening of the electricity sector to private capital.
This contradiction is not minor: while a reform that invites foreign investment in power generation and distribution is being debated, the activity that could best take advantage of energy surpluses —cryptocurrency mining— continues to be punished with seizures and rewards for informants.
The energy reform approved in a first discussion by the National Assembly represents a radical shift. For the first time, private participation models in electricity generation would be authorized, including concessions of up to 25 years and rates that would reflect real production costs
Proponents see in this initiative an opportunity to reverse the collapse of national infrastructure, attract capital, and above all, monetize the enormous volumes of energy that are wasted today — especially in the south of the country, where the Caroní river dams produce more than the grid can transport or consume.
In any country with a coherent energy policy, that surplus would be the perfect fuel for Bitcoin mining farms. High‑consumption data centers, installed close to generation sources, could turn unused electricity into digital value, generating foreign currency, jobs, and a firm demand that would even help stabilize the grid. This is the model that has worked in places like Texas, Kazakhstan, or Paraguay, where miners act as “flexible consumers” that disconnect during peak hours and absorb surpluses when supply exceeds demand.

But in Venezuela, that logic breaks down. The government maintains a total ban on cryptocurrency mining, citing the need to protect the national electrical system in the face of record demand and aging infrastructure. Authorities have deployed military operations to seize ASIC equipment and offer rewards for reporting clandestine mining. The technical justification has a grain of truth: the National Electric System (SEN) is on the verge of collapse due to decades of underinvestment and deferred maintenance. Any additional consumption, they argue, could accelerate blackouts.
However, this reasoning is misleading. Bitcoin mining does not have to be an extra burden; managed well, it can be a tool to finance the rehabilitation of the system itself. What prevents the state from selling surplus energy to mining companies at a competitive price, and using those revenues to repair transformers and transmission lines? Nothing, except a political decision that seems to prioritize control over economic rationality.
The root of the problem runs deeper
The mining ban does not come from an explicit law, but from a regulatory vacuum and changing administrative directives. The National Superintendency of Cryptoassets (Sunacrip), which once regulated the activity, is now practically paralyzed by corruption scandals and internal power struggles. This legal limbo leaves miners without a clear counterpart to negotiate power supply contracts, import permits, or tax frameworks. In the absence of rules, any investment becomes a high‑stakes gamble: one day the authorities tolerate the operation, the next they raid the facility and take away the equipment.
The energy reform, by itself, does not solve this dilemma. In fact, its most controversial clauses — such as the reversion of assets to the state at the end of the concession or the possibility of discretionary intervention — could scare away precisely the capital it seeks to attract. If private investors know that the government can change the rules or expropriate without fair compensation, they will prefer to allocate their resources to countries with stable regulatory frameworks, even if energy costs are higher.

What Venezuela needs is not a half‑hearted reform, but a comprehensive energy policy that reconciles two realities: its enormous hydroelectric potential and the urgent need for foreign currency. Bitcoin mining, far from being an enemy of the electrical system, can be an ally if integrated as a manageable load. Countries like Bhutan have used their dams to mine Bitcoin and today finance social projects with those profits. El Salvador, despite its small scale, explores geothermal mining with volcanic energy. Venezuela, with the Caroní River, could do it on a scale ten times larger.
But as long as the government continues to see miners as electricity smugglers instead of potential industrial partners, the paradox will persist. Energy surpluses will continue to be wasted, electrical infrastructure will degrade without financing, and the country will lose a historic opportunity to position itself in the global digital economy. The energy reform is a first step, but it is incomplete and contradictory. Without an explicit repeal of the mining ban and a stable legal framework that offers 25‑year certainty, the mirage will remain just that: a promise of abundant energy that never ends up turning on the machines.