US Senate Democrats Draft Bill to Curb Crypto Mining Emissions

Two Democratic Senators have introduced the “Clean Cloud Act of 2025” to address the escalating energy emissions from crypto mining.

On April 11, Senators Sheldon Whitehouse and John Fetterman drafted the bill, seeking to curb emissions from crypto mining and AI data centers. The legislation aims to impose fines on facilities that use non-renewable energy sources, by 2035.

The bill also mandates annual reporting from mining facilities and data centers that use over 100 kilowatts of power. Further, the facilities must also provide details of electricity sources, consumption data, and the intensity of emissions.

“There is a lack of transparency regarding the energy sources used to power domestic crypto mining and many data center operations,” the bill read.

Data Centers Account for 4% US Electricity Use: Congress Finds

According to Congress estimates, US-based data centers are projected to account for up to 12% of the nation’s electricity use by 2028.

“The total network hash rate for Bitcoin mining in the US has increased 739% between September 2020 and January 2022.”

The findings also said that data centers are estimated to account for approximately 1% of global electricity demand, and 4% of US electricity usage.

Bill Aims to Lower Mining Emissions to Zero by 2035

The draft bill amends the initial Clean Air Act requiring facilities to adhere to different emissions caps as laid out in the Department of Energy’s National Transmission Needs Study.

The emission caps would be set by the end of this year, the bill said, adding that it would lower by 11% each year until reaching zero in 2035.

Those facilities that exceed the emissions caps would be imposed with inflation-adjusted fees. The penalty depends on how much their emissions exceeded the caps, the legislation noted.

These fees would then be used to reduce increases in residential electricity costs through grants to states and local municipalities. #BTC