Bitcoin Mining ‘Quantum-Safe’ as Research Highlights Astronomical Energy Barriers
Bitcoin hardware entrepreneur Rodolfo Novak and recent academic papers debunk the immediate threat of quantum computing to Bitcoin mining, citing stellar energy requirements.
- Entrepreneur Rodolfo Novak analyzed 66 research papers, concluding that quantum attacks on Bitcoin mining remain physically impractical.
- While Google researchers recently warned of a 20-fold reduction in resources needed to break wallet signatures, mining remains protected by the laws of thermodynamics.
- Research suggests that using Grover’s algorithm to outpace classical miners would require the energy output of a star.
Bitcoin entrepreneur and Coinkite CEO Rodolfo Novak has released an extensive analysis of the intersection between quantum computing and the Bitcoin network, seeking to quell rising anxiety following a series of technical breakthroughs. Novak, who reviewed over 60 academic papers on the subject, argued that the computational energy required to successfully attack the network’s Proof-of-Work (PoW) consensus is so vast it approaches Kardashev-scale requirements.
The discussion comes at a critical time as Google’s Quantum AI team recently published a whitepaper suggesting that ECDSA-256—the elliptic curve cryptography securing Bitcoin addresses—could be broken with far fewer qubits than previously estimated. However, Novak and other researchers emphasize a sharp distinction between wallet security (threatened by Shor’s algorithm) and mining security (targeted by Grover’s algorithm). While wallets may eventually need Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC) upgrades, the mining process is shielded by massive energy barriers.
According to research from BTQ Technologies and shared by Novak, attempting to gain a 51% advantage over classical mining rigs using current quantum techniques would require approximately 10^25 watts of power at current difficulty levels. This figure is roughly equivalent to the total energy output of a star, making the threat more theoretical than existential for the foreseeable future. The study, titled “Kardashev Scale Quantum Computing for Bitcoin Mining,” notes that even with error-corrected qubits, the overhead of the quantum oracle renders it less efficient than purpose-built ASIC miners.
Despite the optimism regarding mining, the Bitcoin community is facing pressure to address the 6.9 million BTC currently held in “at-risk” addresses. These are primarily older Pay-to-Public-Key (P2PK) addresses where the public key is already exposed on the blockchain. Bernstein analysts noted this week that while the network likely has a three-to-five-year window before high-qubit machines become a viable threat to signatures, the transition to quantum-resistant standards must begin soon to avoid “Q-Day” disruptions.
“The truth requires holding two ideas simultaneously: there is no imminent quantum threat to your Bitcoin… and the Bitcoin community should be preparing anyway, because the upgrade process itself takes years,” Novak noted in his findings.
Industry leaders, including Blockstream CEO Adam Back, have echoed these sentiments, suggesting that practical threats to the underlying math of SHA-256 and digital signatures are still decades away. For now, the consensus remains that while address reuse is a growing vulnerability, the physical infrastructure of Bitcoin mining remains the most secure computing network on the planet.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute advice of any kind. Readers should conduct their own research before making any decisions.
© Cryptopress. For informational purposes only, not offered as advice of any kind.
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