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Bitcoin mining was one of the central themes at Acelerando Bitcoin Paraguay 2025. Throughout the sessions, it was addressed from multiple perspectives: the global outlook after 2028, the relationship between energy and development, the specific role of πŸ‡΅πŸ‡Ύ Paraguay, home mining, and even the profitability challenges in the post-halving era.
This mosaic of talks showed us that mining is not just a technical matter of hashrate, but also energy, economics, society, and geopolitics.

⛏️ The Future of Bitcoin Mining After 2028

The international panel led by experts such as Ignacio Pauls and Aydin Kilic put the future of mining after the upcoming halvings on the table.
  • The constant reduction of block rewards will make profitability increasingly dependent on energy efficiency and transaction fees.
  • The integration between miners and energy companies will be key: those who control cheap renewable sources will have the competitive edge.
  • A scenario is projected where mining concentrates in countries with excess clean energy and favorable regulatory frameworks.
πŸ“Œ Conclusion: πŸ‡΅πŸ‡Ύ Paraguay, with its abundant hydroelectric energy, could become one of those strategic enclaves if it manages to articulate investment and regulation.

⚑ Bitcoin and Energy: Mining as a Lever for Development?

Gabriel Lamas and Bruno Vaccotti raised the central question: can mining be an engine of economic development?
  • Mining can become an anchor consumer of electricity, stabilizing demand and financing new infrastructure.
  • However, tensions with local consumption must be avoided: the priority is ensuring that energy serves both the population and the industry.
  • It was emphasized that Bitcoin can act as a lever for foreign investment, job creation, and technological development.
🌍 The challenge is to find a balance between economics, society, and energy, without falling into an extractive model that leaves little value in the country.

🏠 Home Mining

Bitmaker and Wave reminded the audience that mining is not just for large corporations. Home mining has a cultural and educational role:
  • It allows users to participate directly in the network and better understand how Bitcoin works.
  • It is a symbol of personal sovereignty, beyond immediate profitability.
  • Low-consumption, easy-to-install equipment democratizes access and encourages technical curiosity.
πŸ™Œ A powerful idea: even a small home miner is still a piece of the global network that secures Bitcoin.

⚑ Bitcoin and Energy in πŸ‡΅πŸ‡Ύ Paraguay: Threat or Ally for Development?

Felix Sosa and Javier GimΓ©nez debated the local dilemma:
  • Threat: if mining consumes energy at the expense of the population, or if it attracts speculative capital without real development.
  • Ally: if it becomes a catalyst to diversify the economy, attract digital infrastructure, and take advantage of hydroelectric surplus.
The discussion focused on the need for clear public policies that align private and public interests, ensuring shared benefits.

πŸ“‰ Mining in the Post-Halving Era: Strategies to Remain Profitable

With each halving, rewards decrease, and profitability adjusts downward. Bruno Vaccotti and Ignacio Pauls explored how to adapt:
  • Optimization of energy consumption through next-generation hardware.
  • Diversification of income strategies: parallel services, heat reuse, integration with local industries.
  • Consolidation of regional pools to remain competitive against global players.
The message was clear: surviving in the new mining landscape will depend on innovation, efficiency, and resilience.

🌱 Sustainable Mining: Clean Energy and the Future of Hashrate

Elliot David closed with a broader vision:
  • The narrative of mining as polluting loses strength when combined with clean, renewable energy.
  • Bitcoin can be an ally in the energy transition, absorbing surpluses and stabilizing power grids.
  • The future of hashrate will depend on how successfully mining integrates into a framework of environmental sustainability.
⚑ πŸ‡΅πŸ‡Ύ Paraguay holds a strong card: over 90% of its electricity comes from renewable sources. Turning that advantage into global mining leadership is a historic opportunity.

πŸ”‘ Final Reflection

Bitcoin mining is not a debate between β€œindustrial farms vs. home rigs.” It is an integral discussion about energy, economy, sovereignty, and sustainability.
  • At the macro level, πŸ‡΅πŸ‡Ύ Paraguay could position itself as a global energy-mining hub.
  • At the micro level, anyone can plug in a machine and be part of the network.
From hydroelectric dams to home rigs, mining is deeply tied to the present and future of the Bitcoin ecosystem in πŸ‡΅πŸ‡Ύ Paraguay and the world.
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