AMD RX 6900 XT — Mining
AMD RX 6900 XT loses $0.29 a day mining KAWPOW at 33.61 Mh/s and pulling 203.0 W from the wall. That's after subtracting power at $0.1/kWh — not quite breaking even at today's rates.
AMD RX 6900 XT mines KAWPOW most efficiently. This page covers the full algorithm leaderboard, merged-mining options, recommended pools, and a payout history chart you can switch by clicking any row.
This GPU has ? GB of VRAM — most AI marketplaces require at least 12 GB.
Daily projection
Daily winners across all income streams — averaged from your rig's recorded history at $0.1/kWh
| Period | /Day | /Month |
|---|---|---|
| Income | $0.35 | $10.59 |
|
Cost
$0.1/kWh
|
$0.49 | $14.70 |
| Profit | $-0.14 | $-4.11 |
Algorithm payout history ▶ KAWPOW
Net $/day if you'd mined this algorithm continuously at $0.1/kWh. Click any algorithm above to switch.
Daily projection
| Period | /Day | /Month |
|---|---|---|
| Income | $0.20 | $6.00 |
|
Cost
$0.1/kWh
|
$0.49 | $14.70 |
| Profit | $-0.29 | $-8.70 |
| Coin | Algorithm | Income | Cost | Profit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
RVN
Ravencoin
|
KAWPOW
33.61Mh · 203.0W
|
$0.20 | $0.49 | $-0.29 |
|
BEAM
⚠
Beam
|
BeamHashIII
31.49Hh · 134.0W
|
$0.13 | $0.32 | $-0.19 |
|
AE
⚠
Aeternity
|
CuckooCycle
7.427Hh · 257.0W
|
$0.09 | $0.62 | $-0.53 |
ERG
⚠
Ergo
|
Autolykos2
118.5372Mh · 129.0W
|
$0.07 | $0.31 | $-0.24 |
|
ETC
Ethereum Classic
|
Etchash
64.08Mh · 146.0W
|
$0.05 | $0.35 | $-0.30 |
NEXA
⚠
Nexa
|
NexaPoW
58.7829Mh · 283.0W
|
$0.03 | $0.68 | $-0.65 |
|
MONA
⚠
Monacoin
|
Lyra2REv2
94.9643Mh · 284.0W
|
$0.01 | $0.68 | $-0.67 |
KAS
Kaspa
|
KHeavyHash
997.4921Mh · 322.0W
|
— | $0.77 | — |
|
—
|
Curvehash
18.7828Mh · 322.0W
|
— | $0.77 | — |
|
—
|
HoneyComb
89.3971Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Blake3
2.6163Gh · 323.0W
|
— | $0.78 | — |
|
—
|
CNReverseWaltz
2.0273Kh · 202.0W
|
— | $0.48 | — |
|
—
|
BCD
40.6378Mh · 272.0W
|
— | $0.65 | — |
|
—
|
Argon2d-ninja
0.2Hh · 204.0W
|
— | $0.49 | — |
|
—
|
Phi5
12.836Hh · 278.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
X17R
28.7891Mh · 131.0W
|
— | $0.31 | — |
|
—
|
HMQ1725
20.2219Mh · 282.0W
|
— | $0.68 | — |
|
VTC
⚠
Vertcoin
|
Lyra2REv3
99.9938Mh · 277.0W
|
— | $0.66 | — |
|
—
|
Circcash
4.3785Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Skunkhash
77.2499Mh · 276.0W
|
— | $0.66 | — |
|
—
|
X18
25.8615Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
FIRO
Firo
|
FiroPoW
32.55Mh · 323.0W
|
— | $0.78 | — |
|
—
|
Astralhash
59.1947Mh · 271.0W
|
— | $0.65 | — |
|
—
|
X25X
4.8604Mh · 195.0W
|
— | $0.47 | — |
|
—
|
X16Rv2
25.8548Mh · 124.0W
|
— | $0.30 | — |
|
—
|
ProgPowZ
30.2653Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Ethash
64.08Mh · 146.0W
|
— | $0.35 | — |
CKB
Nervos
|
Eaglesong
1.2706Gh · 103.0W
|
— | $0.25 | — |
|
—
|
KangarooTwelve
3.3887Gh · 281.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
PHI1612
53.8592Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Hex
28.9423Mh · 277.0W
|
— | $0.66 | — |
|
—
|
Skein2
1.1067Gh · 281.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
X17
35.9499Mh · 280.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Memehash
108.2562Mh · 323.0W
|
— | $0.78 | — |
|
GRIN
⚠
Grin
|
Cuckatoo32
0.0243Hh · 289.0W
|
— | $0.69 | — |
|
—
|
Equihash(125,4)
49.73Hh · 127.0W
|
— | $0.30 | — |
|
—
|
HeavyHash
1.022Gh · 323.0W
|
— | $0.78 | — |
|
—
|
Ubqhash
58.4731Mh · 237.0W
|
— | $0.57 | — |
|
—
|
SHA256DT
4.4509Gh · 281.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
SHA-256csm
2.9997Gh · 118.0W
|
— | $0.28 | — |
|
—
|
Equihash192_7
46.22Hh · 129.0W
|
— | $0.31 | — |
|
—
|
Chukwa
112.275Kh · 167.0W
|
— | $0.40 | — |
|
—
|
Jeonghash
25.9946Mh · 280.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Dedal
36.2771Mh · 271.0W
|
— | $0.65 | — |
|
—
|
Lyra2vc0ban
119.7995Mh · 272.0W
|
— | $0.65 | — |
|
LTZ
⚠
Litecoinz
|
Zhash
93.7Hh · 253.0W
|
— | $0.61 | — |
|
—
|
vProgPow
14.4705Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
X16R
36.054Mh · 280.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
VRSC
⚠
Verus
|
VerusHash
22.3962Mh · 199.0W
|
— | $0.48 | — |
|
—
|
Chukwa2
40.6937Kh · 187.0W
|
— | $0.45 | — |
|
—
|
Blake (2s)
11.9994Gh · 271.0W
|
— | $0.65 | — |
|
—
|
Equihash(144,5)
91.09Hh · 250.0W
|
— | $0.60 | — |
|
—
|
GhostRider
1.333Kh · 107.0W
|
— | $0.26 | — |
|
—
|
Cuckatoo31
2.56Hh · 284.0W
|
— | $0.68 | — |
|
—
|
Padihash
31.6396Mh · 281.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Pawelhash
22.5002Mh · 280.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
TimeTravel10
72.6388Mh · 283.0W
|
— | $0.68 | — |
|
—
|
X11k
6.7472Mh · 273.0W
|
— | $0.66 | — |
|
—
|
X16RTVEIL
28.2247Mh · 124.0W
|
— | $0.30 | — |
|
—
|
SonoA
5.2196Mh · 283.0W
|
— | $0.68 | — |
|
—
|
Tribus
192.1367Mh · 280.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
X16RT
28.2228Mh · 125.0W
|
— | $0.30 | — |
|
—
|
BeamHashII
58.46Hh · 273.0W
|
— | $0.66 | — |
|
—
|
Cuckaroo29S
6.89Hh · 252.0W
|
— | $0.60 | — |
|
—
|
Equihash210_9
287.76Hh · 217.0W
|
— | $0.52 | — |
|
—
|
X16S
28.1606Mh · 123.0W
|
— | $0.30 | — |
|
—
|
Xevan
12.6045Mh · 278.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Globalhash
148.2679Mh · 264.0W
|
— | $0.63 | — |
|
—
|
X22i
19.9Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Cuckaroo29b
6.88Hh · 136.0W
|
— | $0.33 | — |
|
—
|
X21S
23.268Mh · 280.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Argon2d-16000
13.7561Kh · 285.0W
|
— | $0.68 | — |
|
—
|
Radiant
1.435Gh · 281.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
C11
49.2721Mh · 271.0W
|
— | $0.65 | — |
|
—
|
Cuckarood29
8.026Hh · 230.0W
|
— | $0.55 | — |
|
—
|
ProgPowSERO
32.0301Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
| Pool | Algos supported | Fee | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
CuckooCycle (AE) · BeamHashIII (BEAM) · Eaglesong (CKB) | 1.0% | Visit → |
HeroMiners
|
BeamHashIII (BEAM) · Autolykos2 (ERG) · Etchash (ETC) | 0.9% | Visit → |
|
★
K1Pool
|
Autolykos2 (ERG) · Etchash (ETC) · KHeavyHash (KAS) | 1.0% | Visit → |
Rplant
|
FiroPoW (FIRO) · NexaPoW (NEXA) | 1.0% | Visit → |
Net hashmarket income history
| Period | /Day | /Month |
|---|---|---|
| Income | $0.35 | $10.59 |
|
Cost
$0.1/kWh
|
$0.49 | $14.70 |
| Profit | $-0.14 | $-4.11 |
| Rigs × Qty | Share | Rev /rig/day | Cost /rig/day | Profit /rig/day | Total profit /day |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| — | — | — | — | — | — |
ROI calculator for AMD RX 6900 XT
Model payback, electricity, and first-year return for this rig.
The line crosses $0 on the day you break even. Everything above is pure profit.
| Month | Earned (mo) | Cost burned (mo) | Cumulative earned | Cumulative cost | Net | % ROI |
|---|
Yearly emissions by energy source
Based on the rig's annual power draw and the carbon intensity of common grid mixes.
| Energy source | CO₂e / yr |
|---|---|
| Wind | 19.29 kg |
| Nuclear | 21.05 kg |
| Hydroelectric | 42.09 kg |
| Geothermal | 66.65 kg |
| Solar | 78.93 kg |
| Biofuels | 403.4 kg |
| Gas | 859.42 kg |
| Coal | 1,438.21 kg |
Estimates only — actual emissions vary by hardware, cooling, and grid mix.
What does that actually mean?
At the world-average grid intensity of about 475 g CO₂e/kWh, AMD RX 6900 XT running 24/7 for a year releases about 833 kg of carbon dioxide equivalent. Here's what that looks like in everyday terms:
Where you plug in matters
Electricity is not one thing. A kilowatt-hour from a coal plant carries roughly 820 g of CO₂; the same kilowatt-hour from a hydro reservoir carries about 24 g. That's a 34× difference — large enough that AMD RX 6900 XT's annual footprint swings from roughly 1,438 kg on coal-heavy grids down to about 42 kg on hydro-dominated grids. The single biggest lever a miner has on their carbon footprint is choosing where to plug in.
Regions commonly used for low-carbon crypto mining include Quebec and British Columbia (hydro-dominated, typically <50 g CO₂/kWh), Iceland and Norway (geothermal + hydro, often <30 g), Paraguay (Itaipú hydro), and parts of the US Pacific Northwest. Coal-heavy grids — Kazakhstan, Inner Mongolia, Poland, parts of Australia — sit at the opposite end, often above 700 g CO₂/kWh.
Some operators also reduce their net impact by using otherwise-wasted energy: flare gas at oil wells (burning methane that would be vented anyway), curtailed renewables (wind or solar that the grid can't absorb), or behind-the-meter hydro during off-peak hours. These arrangements can drop effective emissions below the local grid average because the energy would have been wasted or flared without the mining load.
How to reduce this rig's footprint
- Pick a greener ASIC. The efficiency column above matters as much as the grid: a 15 J/TH rig emits roughly half the CO₂ of a 30 J/TH rig for the same hashrate.
- Choose a low-carbon host. Data centres advertising hydro, geothermal, or nuclear power typically sit at <100 g CO₂/kWh.
- Look for stranded or curtailed energy. Flare-gas miners, wind-curtailment co-location, and off-peak hydro arrangements use energy that would otherwise be wasted.
- Use heat recovery. Capturing the heat for greenhouse agriculture, pool heating, or district warmth offsets fossil-fuel heating that would have been burned anyway.
- Time-shift your uptime. In grids with high daytime solar, running more during the day and less at night lowers your effective intensity even if you don't switch providers.
- Purchase verifiable offsets. Treat this as a last resort, not a substitute — and favour additional, permanent, third-party-verified projects (Gold Standard, Verra VCS).
Frequently asked questions
Yearly electricity use = rig power (W) × 24 × 365 ÷ 1000. We multiply that by each row's grid intensity in grams CO₂-equivalent per kWh and convert to kilograms. Intensities are representative averages — real emissions depend on your specific utility mix, time of day, and local transmission losses.
It depends almost entirely on where the electricity comes from. A single rig plugged into hydro in Quebec emits less over a year than an average family's two cars in a month. The same rig on a coal-dominated grid can exceed that in a few days. The hardware is the same — the grid is what changes the answer.
Network-wide estimates vary by methodology; the Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance's Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index is the most widely cited reference. As of recent reporting, the network's sustainable-energy share has grown as more hashrate migrates to hydro, wind, solar, and stranded-gas sites. This page just estimates a single rig — for the big picture, CCAF's dashboard is the best source.
Not directly. The rig draws the same wattage regardless of which pool it joins or how difficulty trends — so its electricity use, and therefore its emissions, stay constant. Those factors change revenue, not power consumption.
This GPU has ? GB of VRAM — most AI marketplaces require at least 12 GB.
Daily projection
Daily winners across all income streams — averaged from your rig's recorded history at $0.1/kWh
| Period | /Day | /Month |
|---|---|---|
| Income | $0.35 | $10.59 |
|
Cost
$0.1/kWh
|
$0.49 | $14.70 |
| Profit | $-0.14 | $-4.11 |
Algorithm payout history ▶ KAWPOW
Net $/day if you'd mined this algorithm continuously at $0.1/kWh. Click any algorithm above to switch.
Daily projection
| Period | /Day | /Month |
|---|---|---|
| Income | $0.20 | $6.00 |
|
Cost
$0.1/kWh
|
$0.49 | $14.70 |
| Profit | $-0.29 | $-8.70 |
| Coin | Algorithm | Income | Cost | Profit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
RVN
Ravencoin
|
KAWPOW
33.61Mh · 203.0W
|
$0.20 | $0.49 | $-0.29 |
|
BEAM
⚠
Beam
|
BeamHashIII
31.49Hh · 134.0W
|
$0.13 | $0.32 | $-0.19 |
|
AE
⚠
Aeternity
|
CuckooCycle
7.427Hh · 257.0W
|
$0.09 | $0.62 | $-0.53 |
ERG
⚠
Ergo
|
Autolykos2
118.5372Mh · 129.0W
|
$0.07 | $0.31 | $-0.24 |
|
ETC
Ethereum Classic
|
Etchash
64.08Mh · 146.0W
|
$0.05 | $0.35 | $-0.30 |
NEXA
⚠
Nexa
|
NexaPoW
58.7829Mh · 283.0W
|
$0.03 | $0.68 | $-0.65 |
|
MONA
⚠
Monacoin
|
Lyra2REv2
94.9643Mh · 284.0W
|
$0.01 | $0.68 | $-0.67 |
KAS
Kaspa
|
KHeavyHash
997.4921Mh · 322.0W
|
— | $0.77 | — |
|
—
|
Curvehash
18.7828Mh · 322.0W
|
— | $0.77 | — |
|
—
|
HoneyComb
89.3971Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Blake3
2.6163Gh · 323.0W
|
— | $0.78 | — |
|
—
|
CNReverseWaltz
2.0273Kh · 202.0W
|
— | $0.48 | — |
|
—
|
BCD
40.6378Mh · 272.0W
|
— | $0.65 | — |
|
—
|
Argon2d-ninja
0.2Hh · 204.0W
|
— | $0.49 | — |
|
—
|
Phi5
12.836Hh · 278.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
X17R
28.7891Mh · 131.0W
|
— | $0.31 | — |
|
—
|
HMQ1725
20.2219Mh · 282.0W
|
— | $0.68 | — |
|
VTC
⚠
Vertcoin
|
Lyra2REv3
99.9938Mh · 277.0W
|
— | $0.66 | — |
|
—
|
Circcash
4.3785Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Skunkhash
77.2499Mh · 276.0W
|
— | $0.66 | — |
|
—
|
X18
25.8615Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
FIRO
Firo
|
FiroPoW
32.55Mh · 323.0W
|
— | $0.78 | — |
|
—
|
Astralhash
59.1947Mh · 271.0W
|
— | $0.65 | — |
|
—
|
X25X
4.8604Mh · 195.0W
|
— | $0.47 | — |
|
—
|
X16Rv2
25.8548Mh · 124.0W
|
— | $0.30 | — |
|
—
|
ProgPowZ
30.2653Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Ethash
64.08Mh · 146.0W
|
— | $0.35 | — |
CKB
Nervos
|
Eaglesong
1.2706Gh · 103.0W
|
— | $0.25 | — |
|
—
|
KangarooTwelve
3.3887Gh · 281.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
PHI1612
53.8592Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Hex
28.9423Mh · 277.0W
|
— | $0.66 | — |
|
—
|
Skein2
1.1067Gh · 281.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
X17
35.9499Mh · 280.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Memehash
108.2562Mh · 323.0W
|
— | $0.78 | — |
|
GRIN
⚠
Grin
|
Cuckatoo32
0.0243Hh · 289.0W
|
— | $0.69 | — |
|
—
|
Equihash(125,4)
49.73Hh · 127.0W
|
— | $0.30 | — |
|
—
|
HeavyHash
1.022Gh · 323.0W
|
— | $0.78 | — |
|
—
|
Ubqhash
58.4731Mh · 237.0W
|
— | $0.57 | — |
|
—
|
SHA256DT
4.4509Gh · 281.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
SHA-256csm
2.9997Gh · 118.0W
|
— | $0.28 | — |
|
—
|
Equihash192_7
46.22Hh · 129.0W
|
— | $0.31 | — |
|
—
|
Chukwa
112.275Kh · 167.0W
|
— | $0.40 | — |
|
—
|
Jeonghash
25.9946Mh · 280.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Dedal
36.2771Mh · 271.0W
|
— | $0.65 | — |
|
—
|
Lyra2vc0ban
119.7995Mh · 272.0W
|
— | $0.65 | — |
|
LTZ
⚠
Litecoinz
|
Zhash
93.7Hh · 253.0W
|
— | $0.61 | — |
|
—
|
vProgPow
14.4705Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
X16R
36.054Mh · 280.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
VRSC
⚠
Verus
|
VerusHash
22.3962Mh · 199.0W
|
— | $0.48 | — |
|
—
|
Chukwa2
40.6937Kh · 187.0W
|
— | $0.45 | — |
|
—
|
Blake (2s)
11.9994Gh · 271.0W
|
— | $0.65 | — |
|
—
|
Equihash(144,5)
91.09Hh · 250.0W
|
— | $0.60 | — |
|
—
|
GhostRider
1.333Kh · 107.0W
|
— | $0.26 | — |
|
—
|
Cuckatoo31
2.56Hh · 284.0W
|
— | $0.68 | — |
|
—
|
Padihash
31.6396Mh · 281.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
Pawelhash
22.5002Mh · 280.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
TimeTravel10
72.6388Mh · 283.0W
|
— | $0.68 | — |
|
—
|
X11k
6.7472Mh · 273.0W
|
— | $0.66 | — |
|
—
|
X16RTVEIL
28.2247Mh · 124.0W
|
— | $0.30 | — |
|
—
|
SonoA
5.2196Mh · 283.0W
|
— | $0.68 | — |
|
—
|
Tribus
192.1367Mh · 280.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
|
X16RT
28.2228Mh · 125.0W
|
— | $0.30 | — |
|
—
|
BeamHashII
58.46Hh · 273.0W
|
— | $0.66 | — |
|
—
|
Cuckaroo29S
6.89Hh · 252.0W
|
— | $0.60 | — |
|
—
|
Equihash210_9
287.76Hh · 217.0W
|
— | $0.52 | — |
|
—
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X16S
28.1606Mh · 123.0W
|
— | $0.30 | — |
|
—
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Xevan
12.6045Mh · 278.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
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Globalhash
148.2679Mh · 264.0W
|
— | $0.63 | — |
|
—
|
X22i
19.9Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
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Cuckaroo29b
6.88Hh · 136.0W
|
— | $0.33 | — |
|
—
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X21S
23.268Mh · 280.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
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Argon2d-16000
13.7561Kh · 285.0W
|
— | $0.68 | — |
|
—
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Radiant
1.435Gh · 281.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
|
—
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C11
49.2721Mh · 271.0W
|
— | $0.65 | — |
|
—
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Cuckarood29
8.026Hh · 230.0W
|
— | $0.55 | — |
|
—
|
ProgPowSERO
32.0301Mh · 279.0W
|
— | $0.67 | — |
| Pool | Algos supported | Fee | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
CuckooCycle (AE) · BeamHashIII (BEAM) · Eaglesong (CKB) | 1.0% | Visit → |
HeroMiners
|
BeamHashIII (BEAM) · Autolykos2 (ERG) · Etchash (ETC) | 0.9% | Visit → |
|
★
K1Pool
|
Autolykos2 (ERG) · Etchash (ETC) · KHeavyHash (KAS) | 1.0% | Visit → |
Rplant
|
FiroPoW (FIRO) · NexaPoW (NEXA) | 1.0% | Visit → |
Net hashmarket income history
| Period | /Day | /Month |
|---|---|---|
| Income | $0.35 | $10.59 |
|
Cost
$0.1/kWh
|
$0.49 | $14.70 |
| Profit | $-0.14 | $-4.11 |
| Rigs × Qty | Share | Rev /rig/day | Cost /rig/day | Profit /rig/day | Total profit /day |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| — | — | — | — | — | — |
ROI calculator for AMD RX 6900 XT
Model payback, electricity, and first-year return for this rig.
The line crosses $0 on the day you break even. Everything above is pure profit.
| Month | Earned (mo) | Cost burned (mo) | Cumulative earned | Cumulative cost | Net | % ROI |
|---|
Yearly emissions by energy source
Based on the rig's annual power draw and the carbon intensity of common grid mixes.
| Energy source | CO₂e / yr |
|---|---|
| Wind | 19.29 kg |
| Nuclear | 21.05 kg |
| Hydroelectric | 42.09 kg |
| Geothermal | 66.65 kg |
| Solar | 78.93 kg |
| Biofuels | 403.4 kg |
| Gas | 859.42 kg |
| Coal | 1,438.21 kg |
Estimates only — actual emissions vary by hardware, cooling, and grid mix.
What does that actually mean?
At the world-average grid intensity of about 475 g CO₂e/kWh, AMD RX 6900 XT running 24/7 for a year releases about 833 kg of carbon dioxide equivalent. Here's what that looks like in everyday terms:
Where you plug in matters
Electricity is not one thing. A kilowatt-hour from a coal plant carries roughly 820 g of CO₂; the same kilowatt-hour from a hydro reservoir carries about 24 g. That's a 34× difference — large enough that AMD RX 6900 XT's annual footprint swings from roughly 1,438 kg on coal-heavy grids down to about 42 kg on hydro-dominated grids. The single biggest lever a miner has on their carbon footprint is choosing where to plug in.
Regions commonly used for low-carbon crypto mining include Quebec and British Columbia (hydro-dominated, typically <50 g CO₂/kWh), Iceland and Norway (geothermal + hydro, often <30 g), Paraguay (Itaipú hydro), and parts of the US Pacific Northwest. Coal-heavy grids — Kazakhstan, Inner Mongolia, Poland, parts of Australia — sit at the opposite end, often above 700 g CO₂/kWh.
Some operators also reduce their net impact by using otherwise-wasted energy: flare gas at oil wells (burning methane that would be vented anyway), curtailed renewables (wind or solar that the grid can't absorb), or behind-the-meter hydro during off-peak hours. These arrangements can drop effective emissions below the local grid average because the energy would have been wasted or flared without the mining load.
How to reduce this rig's footprint
- Pick a greener ASIC. The efficiency column above matters as much as the grid: a 15 J/TH rig emits roughly half the CO₂ of a 30 J/TH rig for the same hashrate.
- Choose a low-carbon host. Data centres advertising hydro, geothermal, or nuclear power typically sit at <100 g CO₂/kWh.
- Look for stranded or curtailed energy. Flare-gas miners, wind-curtailment co-location, and off-peak hydro arrangements use energy that would otherwise be wasted.
- Use heat recovery. Capturing the heat for greenhouse agriculture, pool heating, or district warmth offsets fossil-fuel heating that would have been burned anyway.
- Time-shift your uptime. In grids with high daytime solar, running more during the day and less at night lowers your effective intensity even if you don't switch providers.
- Purchase verifiable offsets. Treat this as a last resort, not a substitute — and favour additional, permanent, third-party-verified projects (Gold Standard, Verra VCS).
Frequently asked questions
Yearly electricity use = rig power (W) × 24 × 365 ÷ 1000. We multiply that by each row's grid intensity in grams CO₂-equivalent per kWh and convert to kilograms. Intensities are representative averages — real emissions depend on your specific utility mix, time of day, and local transmission losses.
It depends almost entirely on where the electricity comes from. A single rig plugged into hydro in Quebec emits less over a year than an average family's two cars in a month. The same rig on a coal-dominated grid can exceed that in a few days. The hardware is the same — the grid is what changes the answer.
Network-wide estimates vary by methodology; the Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance's Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index is the most widely cited reference. As of recent reporting, the network's sustainable-energy share has grown as more hashrate migrates to hydro, wind, solar, and stranded-gas sites. This page just estimates a single rig — for the big picture, CCAF's dashboard is the best source.
Not directly. The rig draws the same wattage regardless of which pool it joins or how difficulty trends — so its electricity use, and therefore its emissions, stay constant. Those factors change revenue, not power consumption.