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I just reviewed some interesting data from CryptoQuant about how the January winter storm hit U.S. miners hard. The production that normally ranged between 70 and 90 BTC daily plummeted to about 30-40 BTC at the peak of the outage. Quite drastic if you think about it.
The curious thing is that it wasn't just due to physical damage or forced blackouts. Much of the drop seems to have been voluntary, with miners reducing operations due to network stress and skyrocketing energy prices. When conditions improved, production gradually recovered, confirming it was temporary.
The data tracked publicly traded operators like Core Scientific, Marathon, Riot Platforms, CleanSpark, and others. All faced similar pressures, so the impact was widespread across the industry. This highlights something many forget: Bitcoin mining is entirely tied to energy markets. Severe weather events not only cause physical disruptions but also spike electricity prices.
What's interesting is that the sector was already under pressure before the storm. Tight margins, higher energy costs, fierce competition. Now some miners are diversifying into AI and high-performance computing as alternative revenue streams. It seems traditional Bitcoin mining needs to evolve to survive volatile cycles.
This event is a reminder that mining remains highly sensitive to external shocks: extreme weather, energy price fluctuations, regulatory changes. For investors, it’s a visible indicator of how fragile the sector can be in the face of disruptions. For operators, it likely accelerates decisions on where to locate new facilities and how to diversify income. We’ll be watching February and March data to see if production returns to pre-storm levels.