| What renders this whole calculation wrong is that it doesn’t account for transaction fees AND transaction fees growth which was also supposed to be growing exponentially, had Bitcoin not been artificially limited to ~ 2 MB blocks every ten minutes. On an actually uncapped Bitcoin instance, Blocks (Block size) and transaction fees will grow exponentially, rendering all such “Bitcoin is environmentally terrible” and “Miners aren’t profitable” calculations absurdly wrong. Other instances exist that are chugging along flawlessly and are set to help miners grow their revenue with on-chain transaction fees growth: DYOR. Of course, BTC Maxis lead by companies set to profit from such an artificial limit on Bitcoin (hint: they often peddle L2 solutions) would hate for you or anyone to understand and study those facts. |
2MB is far too small, but it would be a gross mistake to overcorrect by removing the cap entirely.
See, for example: https://www.gsd.inesc-id.pt/~ler/docencia/rcs1314/papers/P2P...
> On an actually uncapped Bitcoin instance, Blocks (Block size) and transaction fees will grow exponentially
Transaction fees would drop to zero. The fee is a bid in an auction for scarce block space. If block space is not scarce then the winning bid is always zero.