• Contact
  • About
  • ISSN 3049-9720
NEWSLETTER SIGN UP
Yorkshire Bylines
Advertisement
  • Home
  • News
    • Brexit
    • Culture
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Home Affairs
    • Transport
    • World
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Society
    • Food
    • Music
    • Poetry
    • Sport
  • Business
    • Economy
    • Science and Technology
    • Trade
  • Region
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Brexit
    • Culture
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Home Affairs
    • Transport
    • World
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Society
    • Food
    • Music
    • Poetry
    • Sport
  • Business
    • Economy
    • Science and Technology
    • Trade
  • Region
No Result
View All Result
Yorkshire Bylines
Home Business Economy

The government must count the criminal and environmental costs of digital assets

The UK’s push for crypto growth risks boosting corruption, fraud and environmental harm, while heightening global inequality

Natalie BennettbyNatalie Bennett
14-11-2024 06:26
in Economy
Reading Time: 6 mins
A A
cryptocurrency

Image by Jakub Żerdzicki on Unsplash

133
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Growth, growth, growth is the government mantra. But what are we growing? When it comes to the already over-large and frequently environmentally disastrous UK financial sector, riven with fraud and corruption, aiming to become a cryptocurrency centre threatens to increase the damage.

Having a Green in the room meant I was able to bring those concerns to the House of Lords debate on a major change to the law of personal property in England and Wales. (And others picked up my points.)

Cryptocurrency and the law on personal property

The proposed law came from the Law Commission, with a reference from the last government acknowledging that with the development of digital technology, older legislation, covering “things in possession”, objects that you can hold, such as jewellery or furniture, and “things in action”, such as a contractual rights or debts, did not really work for non-fungible tokens, cryptocurrency or other digital assets.

What concerned me was not the direct change in the law, which appears necessary, but the enthusiasm with which the government (and opposition) are embracing it. I quoted in the debate a government press release dated 11 September, which says that Britain wants to “maintains its pole position in the emerging global crypto race” and “maintain its position as a global leader in crypto assets”. I noted: “We are already a leader in global corruption and fraud. How much do we want to magnify that leadership?”

That reflected a quote from 2022 in the same room from Lord Evans, then the chair of the committee on standards in public life, in a debate on corruption secured by my fellow Green Party peer Jenny Jones. He said, reflecting on recent decades: “we have clearly, as a matter of policy, turned a blind eye to the perpetrators of corruption overseas using London for business or leisure purposes.” More recently, a Conservative minister acknowledged that nearly 40% of the world’s “dirty money” flows through the City of London and the British crown dependencies.

Cryptocurrency: a magnet for fraud and criminals

If we look around the world at what cryptocurrency is associated with, we see that it opens up entirely new and lucrative avenues for fraudsters and scammers, terrorists and plutocrats, oligarchs and dictators. They have been using it.

There is the well-known case of Sam Bankman-Fried from the exchange FTX in the US. Indeed, the most recent figures from the FBI, from September, show that, in the US alone, consumers have lost more than $5.6bn through cryptocurrency-related fraud – a 45% jump from 2022. Here in the UK, £3bn-worth of apparently stolen bitcoin was seized in April. The Chinese apparent owners of that Bitcoin are now seeking to get it back.

agriculture
Economy

Changes to agricultural relief: another nail in the coffin for UK agriculture

byDr Peter Gittins
3 November 2024

The unsustainable financial sector

On the issue of the already over-large financial sector, I pointed to an article this week from Martin Wolf in the Financial Times, which suggested that a big source of economic unsustainability is “that the pre-2008 global financial bubble, from which the UK, home to a leading financial hub, benefited… It not only exaggerated the sustainable size of the financial sector, but also exaggerated the sustainable size of a whole host of ancillary activities”.

Let us think carefully about future bubbles – and the costs that they might impose on our society.

Effects on environmental and social factors

Then there are the environmental impacts. Digital assets are often thought of airily as existing “in the cloud”, but they are very much down to Earth, and destroying the Earth. Last year, United Nations scientists evaluated the environmental impacts of just one, Bitcoin. They looked at the activity of 76 Bitcoin-mining nations from 2020 to 2021; the study was published in the journal Earth’s Future. If Bitcoin were a country, its energy consumption would have ranked 27th in the world, the equivalent of Pakistan’s consumption, with its population of 230 million people.

Energy footprint is just one aspect of this. The water footprint over a similar time was enough to have filled 660,000 Olympic-sized swimming pools, which would meet the current domestic water needs of more than 300 million people in rural sub-Saharan Africa. The land-mining footprint of Bitcoin activities was 1.4 times larger than the area of Los Angeles.

The UK government is talking about growing this and seeing how far we can make it go. What can the planet bear? And given that in International Monetary Fund figures, fraud and corruption accounts for up to 5% of global GDP – much of it stolen from the Global South – which badly needs that money for human and environmental wellbeing. Our species cannot afford the social impacts.

CLICK HERE TO DONATE TO OUR CROWDFUNDER

HELP US BECOME STRONGER SO THAT WE CAN CONTINUE TO DELIVER POWERFUL CITIZEN JOURNALISM!

Previous Post

Assisted dying bill is a mess

Next Post

Sheffield cancer nurses win national award

Natalie Bennett

Natalie Bennett

Natalie (Baroness Bennett of Manor Castle) is a Sheffield Green Party member, having been leader of the party 2012–16. She works particularly on food and farming, universal basic income, and making the UK a democracy. The accent is Australian, in case you were wondering, but she moved to the UK in 1999. Follow her on BlueSky

Related Posts

Image is of a wildfire
Economy

A world on the brink: the fragility of modern civilisation

byAndy Brown
17 December 2024
coastal towns
Economy

Forgotten shores: the decline of the North’s coastal towns

byJohn Hall
13 December 2024
Bridgewater Place and other buildings on River Aire in Leeds
Business

Britain’s new industrial strategy

byJohn Hall
18 November 2024
budget
Economy

The good, the bad and the ugly – an assessment of the Reeves budget

byJohn Cole
4 November 2024
agriculture
Economy

Changes to agricultural relief: another nail in the coffin for UK agriculture

byDr Peter Gittins
3 November 2024
Next Post
Sheffield

Sheffield cancer nurses win national award

PLEASE SUPPORT OUR CROWDFUNDER

Download our app
ALL OF BYLINES IN ONE PLACE
Make a monthly or one-off donation
DONATE NOW
We are always looking for citizen journalists
WRITE FOR US
Volunteer as an editor, in a technical role, or on social media
VOLUNTEER FOR US
Something else?
GET IN TOUCH

BROWSE BY TAGS

Art Austerity Boris Johnson Brexit Freedoms Bill Budget Charity Climate Change Cost of Living Covid-19 Creative Industries Crime Democracy Devolution Dominic Cummings Equality Farming Fishing Freedom of Movement Freeports General Election History Human Rights Immigration Journalism Keir Starmer Labour Lessons of Brexit Liz Truss Media Mental Health Monarchy NHS Northern Ireland Protocol Pollution Poverty PPE Refugees and Asylum Seekers Refugee Week REUL Rishi Sunak Ten for Nature Theatre Trans Travel Ukraine
Yorkshire Bylines

We are a not-for-profit citizen journalism publication. Our aim is to publish well-written, fact-based articles and opinion pieces on subjects that are of interest to people in Yorkshire and beyond.

Yorkshire Bylines is a trading brand of Bylines Networks Limited which is separate to, but allied with, Byline Times.

Learn more about us

No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • Authors and editors
  • Complaints
  • Contact
  • Donate
  • Letters
  • Privacy
  • Network Map
  • Network RSS Feeds
  • Submission Guidelines
  • Download the Bylines Network App

© 2020-2024 Yorkshire Bylines. Powerful Citizen Journalism. ISSN 3049-9720

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Brexit
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Health
    • Home Affairs
    • Transport
    • World
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Society
    • Culture
    • Dance
    • Food
    • Music
    • Poetry
    • Recipes
    • Sport
  • Business
    • Economy
    • Science and Technology
    • Trade
  • Region
  • The Davis Downside Dossier
  • The Digby Jones Index
  • Cartoons by Stan

Newsletter sign up

CROWDFUNDER

© 2020-2024 Yorkshire Bylines. Powerful Citizen Journalism. ISSN 3049-9720

Our website only uses cookies to help us record visitor numbers. No third-party cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.