Thursday, November 20, 2025

RM4.6 billion lost to bitcoin farming

On October 17th, this blog touch base with the strange world of digital money in an attempt to understand what the Americans are up to in the issuing of Stable Coins. According to the Russians, it is an attempt to wipeout the national debt that has already reached USD38 trillion. 

So much as appreciating the narratives but not necessarily understand it sufficiently, it relates to matter of Bitcoin. And in the news today, Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Fadillah Yusof revealed of electricity wasted due to Bitcoin mining activities. 

The education on digital money continues with this news from The Star below:

Billions lost to Bitcoin farms

By ARFA YUNUS and TEH ATHIRA YUSOF

NATION

Thursday, 20 Nov 2025

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia suffered losses amounting to RM4.57bil from illegal electricity use linked to bitcoin mining activities over the past five years.

Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Fadillah Yusof (pic), who disclosed this to Parliament yesterday, said 13,827 premises were caught by Tenaga Nasional Bhd (TNB) for stealing electricity to power crypto­currency mining operations, mainly bitcoin farms, since 2020.

“This activity does not only pose safety risks to consumers, it also threatens the stability of our economy and presents a serious danger to the national energy supply system,” he said in a parliamentary written reply.

Fadillah, who is Energy Transition and Water Transfor­mation Minister, said the scale of losses required a robust response, with TNB developing an internal database containing complete records of owners and tenants of premises suspected of electricity theft for crypto-mining purposes.

“This database plays a crucial role in identifying and monitoring suspicious premises and forms the basis for enforcement inspections,” he added.

Fadillah said TNB, in cooperation with the ministry, Energy Commission (ST) and enforcement agencies, has intensified coordinated operations to combat the illicit activity.

This included joint raids with the police, National Anti-Financial Crime Centre, Malaysian Commu­nications and Multimedia Com­mission, CyberSecurity Malaysia, Inland Revenue Board, local authorities and Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission.

“Through these collaborations, TNB is able to seize bitcoin mining machines and take effective action against the perpetrators,” he said.

According to him, public awareness campaigns have also been rolled out via press statements, TV segments and various mass communication channels to educate the public on the dangers of electricity theft and to encourage tip-offs through TNB’s ­official reporting channels.

Fadillah said further measures included stakeholder engagements with MPs, ministries, ST and judicial officers, as well as technical monitoring under the Distribution Trans­former Meter pilot project to detect abnormal usage patterns and potential theft.

Smart meters are also being installed to enable real-time ­monitoring and quick detection of meter tampering.

“The ministry, together with ST and TNB, remains committed to curbing meter interference and the illegal use of electricity, especially for bitcoin mining.

“These integrated enforcement efforts, awareness programmes and strategic engagements are essential to minimising losses to the electricity supply industry and safeguarding the integrity of the nation’s energy system,” he said.

Separately, Deputy Energy Transition and Water Trans­formation Minister Akmal Nasrullah Mohd Nasir said they had established a multi-agency committee to tackle electricity theft linked to illegal bitcoin ­mining operations.

The committee include representatives from the Finance Ministry, Digital Ministry, Home Ministry, Bank Negara Malaysia and the police, and will examine policy, legal and cross-agency issues related to fraudulent power use.

“The committee will also facilitate matters that require intervention at the policy level to curb electricity theft.

“Instead of viewing this only from the enforcement angle, the committee will adopt a holistic approach,” he said during the committee-stage winding-up of the 2026 Supply Bill for the ministry yesterday.

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Bitcoin Mining is the process of verifying bitcoin transactions and storing them in a blockchain(ledger). It is a process similar to gold mining but instead, it is a computer process that creates new bitcoin in addition to tracking Bitcoin transactions. Read on here. .

To understand what is happening, imagine the entire Bitcoin network as a giant, public ledger, like a shared record book that everyone can see, but no single person controls. This ledger tracks every single Bitcoin transaction.

Now, think about what a bank does for you. When you send money, the bank verifies your identity, checks your balance, and updates its private ledger. Bitcoin mining replaces this need for a bank.

"Miners" are individuals or companies with powerful computers. Their job is to gather new transactions and bundle them into a "block" to add to the public ledger. But they can't just add it; they must first win a global computational lottery. Their computers race to solve a very difficult mathematical puzzle. This race requires massive amounts of electricity and computing power, making it extremely expensive to cheat.

The first miner to solve the puzzle gets to add their block of transactions to the ledger. As a reward for this costly work—which secures the network and verifies everyone's transactions—they receive two things: brand new Bitcoins (this is how new currency is created) and all the small transaction fees attached to the payments they verified.

So, in essence, mining is the decentralized, automated process that does the job of a bank—verifying payments and keeping the records secure—without any central authority.

As of Monday, Bitcoin have been off the record high in October at below USD92,000 and forecaster predicting it to go to next level at USD80,000. When energy cost included, what would be its net value?

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