Bitcoin Mining's Looming Challenge: The 2036 Horizon and the Search for Sustainability
A Turbulent Week for Bitcoin and Miners
In early 2026, Bitcoin experienced one of its most volatile periods. The release of the Epstein files on January 31, 2026, implicated several early Bitcoin companies and enthusiasts, casting a shadow over the community. Just days later, on February 5, 2026, Bitcoin suffered its fourth worst drawdown in history, plunging 21% from $76,000 to $60,000 in a single day. While long-term holders felt the sting, miners faced an even harsher reality: hashprice—a key metric measuring mining revenue per unit of hashrate—hit an all-time low of $28.90 per petahash per day, according to data from Hashrate Index. To put that in perspective, operating five modern ASIC miners would barely earn $29 a day—less than a panhandler on a busy street corner.

A Rare String of Negative Difficulty Adjustments
Between November 12, 2025, and February 7, 2026, Bitcoin’s network difficulty experienced six negative adjustments out of seven total. The only positive adjustment was a negligible 0.04% on Christmas Eve. Such a prolonged decline hasn't been seen since 2011, when hobbyists mined with hardware equivalent to a toaster compared to today’s industrial-grade ASICs. This unusual pattern signals extreme economic stress among miners, driven by both a weak Bitcoin price and structural changes in the industry.
The Double Squeeze: Falling Revenue and Pivot to AI
Miners today face a double squeeze. On one side, revenue compression from the 2024 halving and ongoing price weakness reduces their profitability. On the other, many mining firms are pivoting to artificial intelligence computing, decommissioning their ASIC fleets to repurpose energy resources for high-performance AI workloads. This shift further reduces the hashrate applied to Bitcoin, contributing to the difficulty readjustments. But these short-term pains are merely a preview of what lies ahead.
Hashprice Trends Toward Zero: The Long View
The fundamental force behind hashprice’s long-term decline is a combination of Moore’s law and the Bitcoin halving cycle. As semiconductor technology improves, ASIC miners become more energy-efficient, producing more hashrate per watt. This relentless efficiency gains puts constant upward pressure on network difficulty, reducing mining rewards per unit of hashrate. Simultaneously, the block subsidy halves every four years. The next halving in 2028 will reduce the subsidy to 1.5625 BTC, and by 2036 it will be just 0.78125 BTC. For the block subsidy to maintain the same nominal payout as today’s 3.125 BTC (valued at roughly $212,000 at current prices), Bitcoin would need to reach $272,000 by 2036. Without such a price surge, miners must rely on transaction fees to stay afloat.
Can Transaction Fees Save the Day?
Transaction fees are the other potential revenue source, but the trend here is also challenging. Layer-2 solutions like the Lightning Network and sidechains increasingly process payments off-chain, reducing the demand for base-layer blockspace. While occasional fee spikes occur during periods of network congestion, the long-term trajectory is toward lower average fees per transaction. Miners will need to innovate—perhaps by offering block space auctions or time-sensitive transaction prioritization—to capture enough fee revenue to complement the shrinking subsidy.

Miners Adapt or Die: The Road to 2036
Given these headwinds, the mining industry must evolve. Some firms are already exploring stratum v2 and decentralized mining pools to reduce centralization. Others are integrating renewable energy sources to lower operational costs and appeal to ESG-conscious investors. A few are even venturing into waste heat recovery or grid stabilization services as secondary revenue streams. By 2036, the surviving miners will likely be those who can pivot to a hybrid model: mining Bitcoin as a primary business but also offering compute services to AI or scientific computing clients.
What This Means for Bitcoin's Security
If miners exit en masse and hashrate collapses, Bitcoin’s security model could be threatened. A lower hashrate makes the network more vulnerable to a 51% attack, at least in theory. However, Bitcoin’s difficulty adjustment algorithm automatically compensates, making mining easier when hashrate drops. This self-correcting mechanism ensures that even a reduced hashrate can maintain security as long as enough honest miners remain. Moreover, the pivot to AI may not be entirely negative—it could bring new capital and energy infrastructure to Bitcoin mining facilities, enhancing their resilience over the long term.
Conclusion: Nothing Good, Nothing Bad
The title of the original piece—'Bitcoin Mining Is Dead, Long Live the Miners!'—captures the paradox perfectly. The classic model of subsidy-driven mining is indeed fading, but the industry is not dying; it is transforming. By 2036, miners will operate in a world where block rewards are minimal, hashprice approaches zero, and transaction fees dominate revenue. Those who adapt will thrive; those who don’t will be forced out. Ultimately, Bitcoin’s design ensures that the network remains secure regardless of how miners evolve. The only constant is change, and the miners who embrace it will be the ones still hashing come 2036.
References: Hashrate Index, Bitcoin Magazine (original article), CoinMetrics.Related Articles
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