The year 2024 saw the Bitcoin mining industry record significant developments and historic milestones. According to a report by the Bitcoin mining entities NiceHash and Digital Mining, 2024 was a record-breaking year for the promising industry.
NiceHash and Digital Mining revealed that in 2024, the mining industry witnessed high block space demand, increased hashrate, and new trends in mining machine models. Large mining companies also expanded via mergers and acquisitions, enhancing their output and efficiency.
Mining Developments in 2024
In 2024, the Bitcoin network started at block 823,807 and ended at block 877,270 after producing 53,463 blocks with an average block time of 9 minutes and 83 seconds. By the fourth Bitcoin halving, which slashed miner rewards from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 per block, around 93.75% of all Bitcoin had been mined.
The Bitcoin miner ViaBTC produced the halving block, which recorded the highest fees seen since May 2021: 37.626 BTC in transaction fees. Over a month before the halving, Marathon Digital mined the largest-ever Bitcoin block, measuring 3,990.36 kilobytes. Notably, the first 100 blocks after the last halving averaged 11.19 BTC in fees.
Although the halving turned 2024 into a challenging year for miners, these entities still added a record amount of hashrate to the Bitcoin network. The year started with a hashrate of 515 EH/s and ended with 807 EH/s after reaching an all-time high of 808 EH/s. This represented a hashrate growth of 56.7% or 292 EH/s.
Furthermore, the halving event caused the Bitcoin hashprice to tumble to record lows, while the network saw 26 difficulty adjustments.
Predictions for 2025
The United States maintained its dominant position among the leading regions in the mining industry. However, NiceHash and Digital Mining found that Africa and South America are emerging regions as miners leverage their underutilized energy resources.
Also, there was a notable shift among Bitcoin miners, with many pivoting toward a bitcoin (BTC) treasury strategy. Several miners did not just decide to hold the coins they produced but also took steps to raise capital to make additional purchases.
Additionally, miners expanded their capacities by upgrading their mining machines, pursuing strategic acquisitions, and raking in new capital through various means, including initial public offerings. In fact, the market cap of publicly traded mining stocks exceeded $50 billion for the first time.
Interestingly, the halving event led to lower BTC production in 2024, but a higher BTC price helped ease the impact of the reduced output.
Meanwhile, NiceHash and Digital Mining outlined several predictions for the mining industry in 2025, including broader adoption of the bitcoin treasury strategy, heightened profitability for miners, and network hashrate surpassing 1 zetahash.