On Tuesday (May 12), Alejandro De La Torre, Vice President at Poolin, which is one of largest Bitcoin mining pools, said that the Bitcoin hash rate of all mining pools had gone down since the halving event that took place on Monday (May 11).

So, what is a mining pool? Here is how a nice explanation:

“A mining pool is a joint group of cryptocurrency miners who combine their computational resources over a network.

“Individually, participants in a mining pool contribute their processing power toward the effort of finding a block.

“If the pool is successful in these efforts and is rewarded with cryptocurrency tokens as a result, the mining pool divides up these rewards to individuals who contributed according to the proportion of each individual’s processing power or work relative to the whole group.

“In some cases, individual miners must show proof of work in order to receive their rewards.”

The pie chart below from Blockchain.com shows the (estimated) hashrate distribution amongst the largest Bitcoin mining pools in the past four days:

BTC mining pools on 13 May 2020.png

On May 2, in a blog post for Poolin, De La Torre wrote:

“There is little doubt among researchers and industry experts that the hashrate is going to drop significantly when the block subsidy gets cut in half.” 

As for the question of “how much hashrate will come offline”, he estimated that following Bitcoin’s third halving event on May 11, up to 30% of Bitcoin’s hash rate could disappear due to the departure of several unprofitable miners.

On May 11 (Bitcoin Halving Day), De La Torre told Cointelegraph:

“Mining farm personnel are shutting [their units] off as we speak since they will not want to do it after the halving — because then they’re losing money.”

Yesterday, he provided an update (based on data from his company’s blockchain explorer tool “Blockin“) on how the hash rate controlled by various Bitcoin mining pools had decreased since the halving, and suggested that the 50% reduction in the Bitcoin block mining reward may have caused some miners to (partly) switch to Bitcoin Cash (BCH) or Bitcoin SV (BSV):

Larry Semark, Director of Research at The Block, says that Bitcoin’s hash rate “appears to have dropped by about 16% after the third halving as miners now generate twice less from the block subsidy.”

According to data from BitInfoCharts, the Bitcoin hash rate dropped from 137.57 EH/s on May 11 to 117.86 EH/s, which means a decline of 14.32%:

BTC hash rate on 13 May 2020.png