The 2024 Bitcoin Halving Block: An Expensive Feat
Investors spent over 37.7 Bitcoin, equivalent to $2.4 million, in fees to secure their position on the 2024 Halving Block, marking it as the priciest block ever mined. The event, which took place on April 20 at 12:09 p.m. UTC, saw Bitcoin miner ViaBTC produce the 840,000th block, initiating an automated protocol that reduces per-block BTC emissions by half. This occurrence, known as the Bitcoin Halving, resulted in mining rewards being slashed from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC. Revenue generated from Bitcoin mining reached record levels on the day of the halving, accumulating $107.7 million in daily earnings as community members willingly paid exorbitant fees to have their transactions included in the 840,000th Bitcoin block.
Record-breaking Fees and Bitcoin Mining Rewards
- Investors expended 37.7 Bitcoin, around $2.4 million, in fees to secure their spot on the 2024 Halving Block
- The Bitcoin miner ViaBTC produced the 840,000th block, triggering a protocol that halves per-block Bitcoin emissions
- The Bitcoin Halving event decreased mining rewards from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC
- Daily earnings from Bitcoin mining reached $107.7 million on the halving day
Impact of Unique Satoshis on Record Fees
One major contributor to the unprecedented fees was the rush by users to inscribe unique Satoshis on the halving block. A new protocol introduced by Rodarmor allows users to engrave individual Satoshis with distinct identification numbers and embed them with arbitrary data directly into Bitcoin’s blockchain. Beyond the race to inscribe the initial Runes, Bitcoin mining pools also vied for an “epic” Satoshi, the first or smallest possible Bitcoin denomination mined on the halving block. Despite the decline in Bitcoin mining rewards, many crypto miners have experienced a significant blow to their income. To counterbalance the reduction in mining rewards post-halving, miners have leveraged technological advancements to enhance mining efficiency. Yet, as per pseudonymous Ordinals developer Leonidas, “Runes degens have effectively compensated for the decline in miner rewards from the halving.”
Hot Take: Looking Ahead in Bitcoin Mining
With $3.82 million spent in fees, excluding miner subsidies, on the five blocks following the halving, the future looks promising for Bitcoin mining operations, illustrating a positive trajectory despite the challenges faced post-halving.
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Sources:
– [Mempool.Space](https://mempool.space/block/0000000000000000000320283a032748cef8227873ff4872689bf23f1cda83a5)
– [Mempool.Space](https://mempool.space/block/000000000000000000027b0ec0e3acadd018cd19e7dd976602f216a1bc12d079)