The government of Kazakhstan has unveiled a package of measures aimed at further taxing the nation’s Bitcoin (BTC) and crypto mining sector. The measures will involve tax hikes on electricity, a crackdown on unregistered miners, a tax on mining hardware, and the introduction of VAT charges on mining-related equipment sales.
The tone was set last week by the Minister of Digital Development Bagdat Musin, who took to Facebook to complain that unregistered crypto miners were “severely damaging” the national “energy system.” He added that the “energy costs of illegal mining” were currently on course to “surpass 1 gigawatt.”
He concluded by calling on all miners not already registered with the department to make their presence known and join a national database of approved miners.
Miners have had a rough winter so far in Kazakhstan, one of the world’s biggest mining destinations. They were partly blamed for energy shortages and fuel price rises that led to bloody social unrest and their data centers were left stranded without power for months on end. Most recently, their power lines were cut once again with emergency imbalances disrupting the grid.
Now, in a country that once courted them openly, they are facing a range of new financial barriers that could lead some to consider relocation options.
According to Kazinform, the government has unveiled a draft bill named 'On Digital Assets in the Republic of Kazakhstan'. In the bill, Marat Sultangaziev, the Finance Ministry’s Deputy Minister stated at an interdepartmental commission, were provisions including a monthly inventory check on miners.
Each unit of mining equipment in an inventory – regardless of whether or not it is connected to the grid or the internet – would incur a tax
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