Bitcoin Goes Beast Mode—Mining Power Tops 1 Zetahash In First-Ever Surge
07 Aprile 2025 - 5:30PM
NEWSBTC
Bitcoin is alive and kicking, spewing out impressive hashrate
numbers like never before. Bitcoin’s network processing power has
reached an unprecedented 1 Zetahash per second (ZH/s), marking a
major milestone in the cryptocurrency’s 16-year history. Multiple
blockchain tracking services confirmed the achievement between
April 4-5, 2023, though they disagree on the exact timing of when
the threshold was crossed. Related Reading: XRP Will Explode—And
This Korean Expert Says He’ll Be ‘Laughing’ At Critics Different
Trackers Report Varying Dates For Historic Milestone A Zetahash
(ZH/s) is a unit of computational power used to measure Bitcoin’s
hashrate, which reflects how much computing power is being used to
secure the Bitcoin network through mining. According to
mempool.space data, Bitcoin’s hashrate peaked at 1.025 ZH/s on
April 5. BTC Frame’s metrics showed a slightly earlier breakthrough
at 1.02 ZH/s on April 4. Meanwhile, Coinwarz reported an even
higher peak of 1.1 ZH/s on April 4 at block height 890,915, but
also suggested the network first hit the 1 ZH/s mark on March 24.
The differences stem from how each service calculates hashrate.
Blockchain analyst Jameson Lopp previously pointed out that using
one “trailing block” versus five blocks for estimation can result
in differences exceeding 0.04 ZH/s. Mitchell Askew, head analyst at
Blockware Solutions, said viewing the raw Hashrate metric can be
deceiving due to random variations in block times. He noted that
Bitcoin’s 30-day moving average hashrate remains around 0.845 ZH/s.
Network Shows Massive Growth Since 2016 This achievement represents
remarkable growth for the Bitcoin network. The current hashrate of
1 ZH/s equals 1,000 Exahashes per second, marking a 1,000-fold
increase since late January 2016 when the network first reached 1
EH/s. To put this computational power in perspective, Bitcoin now
processes approximately 40,000 times more calculations per second
than Litecoin, the second-largest proof-of-work cryptocurrency
network. Based on Coinwarz data, Litecoin currently operates at
just 2.49 Petahashes per second. Commercial Mining Operations Drive
Hashrate Growth According to Askew, the surge in hashrate has
coincided with increased competition among commercial Bitcoin
mining firms. Miners are doubling down, and expanding sites and
plugging in more efficient machines, he said. However, he warned
that less efficient miners might struggle unless Bitcoin prices
increase in the coming months. Related Reading: Ethereum Slips
Below Triangle—Is A $1,600 Crash Next? At least 24 publicly listed
companies now operate Bitcoin mining equipment, according to
CompaniesMarketCap.com. MARA Holdings leads the pack with more than
50 EH/s of computing power. Other major contributors include Riot
Platforms, Core Scientific, CleanSpark, Hut 8 Mining, and TeraWulf.
Most of the network’s hashrate flows through major mining pools,
with Foundry USA Pool and AntPool controlling the largest shares,
according to the Hashrate Index. Record Hashrate Coincides With
Market Downturn The network’s technical achievement occurred during
a sharp market decline. Bitcoin’s price fell 8% over a 24-hour
period to $77,210, while US stocks experienced what analysts called
the largest two-day loss ever. Featured image from Gemini Imagen,
chart from TradingView
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