"War in Ukraine: Generating Bitcoin takes an enormous amount
of energy. Burning Russian natural gas could provide just that energy.
Crypto technology creates payment systems that the Western
banking system cannot control. What this means for trading and future
transactions.
It was unusually quiet in the rarely quiet crypto community
as major cryptocurrency prices increased on Monday. The bitcoin was
suddenly worth around ten percent more - the day after the sanctions against
the Russian central bank came into force. Investors appear to be betting on a
scenario that the US Treasury Department warned about back in October, namely
that cryptocurrencies pose a growing threat to the effectiveness of Western
sanctions. Less dollar payment transactions, more Bitcoin, so the logic goes.
Could cryptocurrencies actually serve to open up alternative payment channels
to Russia outside of the reach of Western governments?
After all, the promise of cryptocurrencies lies precisely in
creating monetary systems that are independent of governments, apparently even
in times of war. Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Mykhailo Fedorov urged crypto
exchanges to make corresponding commitments when he tweeted on Sunday urging
them to stop doing business with Russian customers. Binance, the world's
leading crypto exchange, told CNBC that crypto is intended to "enable
greater financial freedom. Unilaterally denying people access to their crypto
assets would totally defeat the very spirit of crypto even existing."
Other exchanges made similar statements. They emphasized that they would
implement the sanctions that had been decided, but not take any action beyond
that. "A unilateral and full lockdown on Russia would penalize ordinary
Russian citizens who are experiencing an historic destabilization of their
currency," crypto exchange Coinbase told Vice magazine.
Evidence of sanctions violations would be indelible
In fact, cryptocurrency trading is picking up in both Russia
and Ukraine due to the war. Since the start of the Russian invasion, crypto
exchanges have seen the highest transaction volumes in Russian rubles and
Ukrainian hryvnias in months.
However, there is little evidence that banks and companies
that have been sanctioned are using these channels to a relevant extent, says
Philipp Sandner, professor at the Frankfurt School of Finance & Management.
The Russian economy - just like the German and others - is simply not ready to
deal with cryptocurrencies. Lots of things could go wrong. Hackers could loot
the crypto company accounts if security mistakes were made. "Now imagine
if tomorrow your boss decided to process company payments in Bitcoin. Can you
imagine that?"
At least in the next nine to twelve months, that won't be
possible, Sandner continues. The Russian economy needs at least that long to
switch to crypto - if it happens. The fundamental problem is not solved if you
have open payment channels outside the banking system, but no one on the other
side who accepts the payments: Western companies would hardly accept bitcoins
from Russian partners who are on the sanctions list. Because cryptocurrencies
can be processed without giving a name, but every transaction is technically
traceable and indelible. Once it has been determined to whom which crypto
account belongs, the evidence of sanctions violations is crystal clear.
North Korea loots cryptocurrencies with digital heists
However, China, Russia's most important trading partner, is
not participating in the sanctions. With the E-Yuan, the Chinese People's Bank
is building a digital payment system that is independent of the international
banking system and thus of the dollar. Currently it is only used within China.
If Russia were given the opportunity to access it as well, financial flows to
its Chinese partners would be restored - possibly until Moscow develops its
e-ruble. In October 2020, officials from the Central Bank of Russia told the
Moscow newspaper Izvestia that a digital ruble could make the country more
independent from the US and enable it to better protect itself against
sanctions. For the time being, however, all of this is speculation, emphasizes
Sandner.
A Western-controlled international banking communications
system like Swift, from which some Russian financial institutions were recently
banned, would no longer be necessary in a world of digital currencies. Like
China, Russia could then establish financial flows with trading partners that
do not participate in the sanctions.
Like with Iran. The regime there has also
found a way to use cryptocurrencies in the short term to get money. The oil,
which it can no longer sell due to international sanctions, is burned in power
plants and used to generate bitcoins. Should Russia no longer get rid of its
gas, that could also be a conceivable scenario for Moscow.
Finally, experts refer to another possible source of crypto
money. The model for this would be North Korea. The money for its nuclear
program is said to come in large part from so-called ransomware cyber attacks,
in which hackers steal company data and return it for a crypto ransom. That
would be a very robust form of foreign exchange procurement. But it's not
exactly the case that the Russian government has recently shown itself to be
particularly squeamish."
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