Bitcoin 2025参会指南
2025年5月27日-5月29日,Bitcoin 2025大会将在拉斯维加斯召开。本次会议汇聚业内诸多大咖,金色财经特整理会议指南,助您安心参会。
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China is quietly re-emerging as one of the world’s most profitable Bitcoin mining hubs, despite maintaining an official nationwide ban on mining since 2021. New industry data shows the country now accounts for an estimated 14% to 20% of global hashrate, placing it firmly back inside the top three global mining centers.
China’s “Banned” Bitcoin Mining Is Back
— Briefing Block (@briefing_block_) November 24, 2025
China’s ‘banned’ Bitcoin mining industry is back in the game.
Hash rate estimates now put China at about 14% of global BTC mining, up from effectively zero after the 2021 crackdown and back in the world’s top three.
Mining rig maker… pic.twitter.com/b88rNxvEAO
Far from being an accidental resurgence, the revival appears to be the result of Beijing’s increasingly pragmatic approach to managing its vast domestic energy surplus — and the growing realization that mining, though politically sensitive, remains too economically lucrative to ignore.
While Beijing publicly maintains a hardline stance against domestic Bitcoin mining, the reality on the ground tells a different story. Energy-rich regions such as Xinjiang and Sichuan are overflowing with electricity that cannot be exported, leaving massive surpluses that would otherwise go unused.
Local miners, grid operators, and private data-center owners have stepped in to fill the gap, turning abandoned or under-utilized industrial sites into clandestine mining farms that operate just below regulatory radar.
🇨🇳 JUST IN: Reuters confirms #Bitcoin mining is quietly resurging inside China.
— Nexus (@Nexus_Epoch) November 24, 2025
After the 2021 ban, China has climbed back to ~14% of global hashpower… and some analysts say it may be closer to 25%.
Cheap power + unused datacenters = mining coming back underground.
China… pic.twitter.com/wFdUdqy10t
In Xinjiang, where coal and wind power plants routinely generate far more energy than the grid can transport, miners have become a convenient outlet — a way to soak up surplus electricity while quietly stimulating local economies. One miner based in Urumqi revealed
"A large part of the energy cannot be transmitted outside Xinjiang, so we can consume it via crypto mining...New mining projects are under construction. All I can say is that people mine where electricity is cheap."
The resurgence is visible not only in hashrate data but also in hardware demand. Mining-rig manufacturer Canaan has seen domestic sales skyrocket — rising from single-digit percentages after the crackdown to more than 50% of its total revenue in 2025, fueled by rising Bitcoin prices and supply-chain uncertainty linked to U.S. tariffs.

The combination of cheap power and accessible hardware has revived China’s mining ecosystem from the shadows, turning forgotten power surpluses into a highly profitable backdoor industry.
At the same time, evidence suggests the resurgence extends beyond Bitcoin. Ethereum-based GPU projects, Litecoin farms, and even stablecoin experimental nodes have quietly appeared across regions previously known for industrial power capacity. Despite its public stance, China’s crypto economy remains active, highly adaptive, and increasingly integrated into its broader digital and energy strategies.
💥 Litecoin ETF Sees Zero Inflows, Analysts Eye $1,000-$2,000 $LTC Rally Behind $XRP and $SOL
— Coinspeaker (@coinspeaker) November 25, 2025
The Canary Litecoin ETF has posted zero net inflows for five consecutive trading sessions, making it the weakest performer among other crypto ETFs. Full story ⬇️https://t.co/4kOQyjfKsOpic.twitter.com/AoUt6quCfj
China’s approach to digital assets has shifted from strict suppression toward cautious, selective tolerance — especially when strategic or economic incentives are involved. While Beijing continues to promote the digital yuan as the centerpiece of its fintech agenda, it has simultaneously embraced experiment-driven frameworks through Hong Kong.
Hong Kong is cementing its status as a regulated digital asset hub by introducing two new laws to its Virtual Asset regulatory framework.
— Conor Kenny (@conorfkenny) November 20, 2025
Expect increased scrutiny on licensing, investor protection, and compliance standards for exchanges and service providers.
Focus on growth… pic.twitter.com/60OObcnq9v
The signals are clear, even if unspoken. Patrick Gruhn, CEO of Perpetuals.com, does not mince his words
"The resurgence of mining activity in China is one of the most important signals the market has seen in years."
In 2025, Hong Kong rolled out a full regulatory licensing regime for fiat-backed stablecoins, establishing itself as one of the most tightly regulated digital-asset hubs in Asia. This move coincided with Beijing’s interest in yuan-backed offshore stablecoins, which analysts believe could strengthen renminbi adoption in cross-border payments and challenge the dollar-dominated stablecoin market.
This dual-track strategy — prohibition on paper, experimentation in practice — allows China to explore blockchain-based financial models without exposing domestic markets to speculative volatility. Meanwhile, mainland officials appear increasingly willing to ignore underground mining operations as long as they align with local economic needs, support local power grids, or contribute to revenue through indirect channels.
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— China coin (@chinacoinsbsc) November 25, 2025
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Distribution airdrop after 24 hours ⏰ pic.twitter.com/m2jugvi11g
Rather than reversing its crypto ban outright, China has simply shifted toward a “don’t ask, don’t tell” posture that rewards miners who keep a low profile and maintain beneficial relationships with local operators. In this sense, the country’s crypto mining revival is not an accident — it is the natural outcome of a system that values economic output above ideological consistency.
China’s discreet return to Bitcoin mining mirrors a broader global pattern. Countries that once declared absolute bans — including Russia, Nigeria, India, and Zimbabwe — have since walked back their policies, replacing blanket prohibitions with partial regulations or controlled allowances.
Russia provides one of the clearest parallels. After years of publicly condemning Bitcoin, the country has now embraced mining as a strategic economic tool, particularly in regions with excess energy like Siberia.
Moscow has openly encouraged state-owned energy companies to build mining operations, positioning crypto mining as an export-free way to monetize stranded power resources while bypassing Western sanctions.
🚨BREAKING:
— Merlijn The Trader (@MerlijnTrader) October 22, 2025
RUSSIA JUST LEGALIZED BITCOIN MINING AND APPROVED CRYPTO PAYMENTS FOR FOREIGN TRADE. 🇷🇺
THE CENTRAL BANK AND MINISTRY OF FINANCE ARE ALIGNING FOR BLOCKCHAIN-BASED SETTLEMENTS.
THE ERA OF BLOCKCHAIN-BASED COMMERCE HAS BEGUN. pic.twitter.com/IVqVmh2aSP
Similarly, Nigeria and Zimbabwe — once among the strictest anti-crypto jurisdictions — now view mining and digital-asset activity as engines for economic growth. In each case, policymakers have come to the same conclusion: banning crypto does not eliminate it, and ignoring it only forfeits revenue to underground markets.
Against this international backdrop, China’s covert tolerance looks far less contradictory and far more strategic. Cheap power remains one of the biggest determinants of global mining dominance, and China’s massive overproduction gives it a natural advantage that policymakers appear increasingly unwilling to waste.
China’s unofficial mining comeback raises a bigger question: Is the country being shrewd by monetizing its excess energy rather than letting it go to waste?
On an economic level, the logic is difficult to ignore. China produces enormous amounts of unused electricity each year due to misaligned industrial demand, transmission bottlenecks, and overinvestment in regional power plants. Bitcoin mining — inherently mobile and highly energy-efficient — provides a way to convert otherwise wasted electricity into hard revenue, without requiring new infrastructure or risking grid stability.
🚨 China Back in $BTC Mining Game
— Crypto.Andy (@oksandy_d) November 24, 2025
Despite the 2021 ban, China now accounts for ~14% of global $BTC mining, driven by cheap electricity, excess data center capacity, and rising domestic rig sales. Underground mining is growing, especially in Xinjiang & Sichuan.
BTC hashprice… pic.twitter.com/kQXaeidMU1
Politically, China avoids formally lifting the ban, maintaining regulatory control and preventing domestic speculation while still benefiting from the financial upside of underground mining activity. In practice, this allows local governments and power providers to operate in a gray zone where everyone wins: miners gain access to cheap power, regional economies benefit from the activity, and China preserves its geopolitical leverage within the global crypto ecosystem.
Whether one views China’s approach as inconsistent or ingenious, the outcome is the same: the country is once again one of the world’s most influential Bitcoin mining hubs — all while insisting the industry remains illegal.
As long as electricity remains abundant and profits remain high, China’s quiet resurgence in mining may continue shaping the global hashrate for years to come.
2025年5月27日-5月29日,Bitcoin 2025大会将在拉斯维加斯召开。本次会议汇聚业内诸多大咖,金色财经特整理会议指南,助您安心参会。
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