Crypto mining accounts for up to 20% of Iran’s power shortage
File photo of a cryptocurrency mining farm in Iran
Iranian energy officials have sounded the alarm over the impact of cryptocurrency mining on the national electricity grid, saying that crypto mining now accounts for as much as 15 to 20 percent of Iran's electricity imbalance.
According to Mohammad Allahdad, deputy director of power generation, transmission and distribution of Iran’s power company, Tavanir, crypto mining operations are responsible for consuming nearly 2,000 megawatts (MW) of electricity — roughly the output of two Bushehr nuclear reactors.
“While this represents around 5% of total electricity consumption, it accounts for up to 20% of the current power deficit,” Allahdad said on Monday, calling the figure significant and alarming.
During a recent internet outage linked to the conflict with Israel, power consumption nationwide dropped by 2,400 MW, which Tavanir attributes to the shutdown of over 900,000 crypto mining devices operating illegally -- further validating the scale of their impact.
Allahdad’s remarks come amid growing concerns over blackouts, infrastructure strain, and public discontent during the country’s sweltering summer months when electricity demand peaks. Amid blistering summer temperatures, electricity demand from air conditioners, agriculture, and industrial production surges.
Allahdad stressed that using power for crypto mining during high demand days is “not only illegal and unethical, but also harmful,” adding that it risks voltage drops, fuse failures, damage to household appliances, and even fire hazards.
“Crypto mining devices produce intense heat,” he said. “We’ve had multiple reports from fire departments about fires linked to mining rigs, some of which spread to neighboring homes.”
Illegal farms hidden in plain sight
Authorities say abandoned homes, empty shops, warehouses, and industrial buildings are often repurposed for clandestine mining operations. These facilities frequently feature high electricity usage and surveillance cameras, which serve as red flags for investigators.
“Identifying these operations is challenging,” Allahdad said, “especially in large industrial areas. That’s why public cooperation has been crucial.”
To support enforcement efforts, Tavanir launched a public reporting line. Citizens who report illegal operations can receive rewards of up to 200 million tomans (about $2,300).
One bitcoin equals 440 homes
According to Hadi Sefidmou, head of Iran’s Crypto Mining Oversight and Regulation Initiative, producing a single Bitcoin with older mining devices can consume up to 1 million kilowatt-hours (kWh) — equivalent to the annual power use of 440 Iranian households. Even newer miners with better efficiency still consume significant amounts, with average power usage per unit ranging between 2 to 3.5 kW.
Given that each device operates 24/7, each illegal miner consumes as much power as 12 households, Sefidmou said.
Authorities destroying illegal cryptocurrency mining equipment in Alborz province (file photo)
Crackdowns accelerate
As enforcement intensifies, seizures of mining equipment have surged since last year. Over 250,000 illegal devices have been seized across Tehran, Khorasan Razavi, Isfahan, Fars, Kerman, and East Azarbaijan, with most units hidden in abandoned homes, rural farms, industrial ruins, and suburban villas.
Just this week, 108 mining rigs were confiscated in the southern city of Ahvaz, discovered in an abandoned factory in the village of Khabineh, according to Mohammad Forati, CEO of Ahvaz Power Distribution Company. Forati said the operation had caused voltage drops across the area, prompting citizen complaints.
Mahmoud Mahmoudi, managing director of the Markazi Province Power Distribution Company, said on Tuesday that 445 cryptocurrency mining devices have been identified and confiscated in the province since the beginning of the current year (March 21).
Another recent case in Alborz province saw 26 crypto farms shut down from March to June alone, with 168 unauthorized devices confiscated. In another incident last week, power company staff in Alborz intercepted a vehicle transporting 26 miners.
Iran’s subsidized electricity remains among the cheapest in the world.
“With electricity consumption hitting new records — above 70,000 MW — we cannot afford to ignore this,” said Mostafa Rajabi Mashhadi, CEO of Tavanir. “Every illegal miner we unplug helps preserve power for citizens.”
Iran's foreign minister on Monday insisted Iran would not give up enrichment and the United States has no way to end it militarily, hours after US President Donald Trump vowed to wipe out Iran's nuclear sites again if it revived its activities.
"All should know that we Iranians have NOT BOUGHT our PEACEFUL nuclear program; we have BUILT IT WITH BLOOD, SWEAT, AND TEARS," Araghchi posted on X on Monday.
"Yes, our enrichment facilities are severely damaged, but our DETERMINATION IS NOT."
“They can start again. If they do, we'll wipe it out faster than you can wave your finger at it. We'll have to do that. We will do that gladly, openly and gladly,” Trump said.
"They still talk about enrichment. I mean, who would do that? ... How stupid can you be to say that?" Trump said.
On his message on X, Araghchi said the damage of the military strike were severe, but Iran will follow through with enrichment plans.
“The technology and know-how that our formidable human resources have developed cannot be destroyed by bombings. Yes, our enrichment facilities are severely damaged, but our determination is not,” Araghchi said.
"Iran knows exactly what happened during the recent American-Israeli aggression, both to us and our adversaries, including the extent of blows that are still being censored," Araghchi added.
Iran fired 13 missiles towards the United Stated Al Udeid based on Qatar on June 23 and one day after US attack on nuclear facilities in Fordow, Natanz and Esfahan.
At the time, President Trump said "13 (missiles) were knocked down, and 1 was ‘set free,’ because it was headed in a nonthreatening direction."
Iran International reported on July 11 citing satellite imagery that a cutting-edge communications hub within the United States base in Qatar was apparently destroyed due to Iran missile attack.
Israel launched a 12-day military campaign against Iran on June 13, killing hundreds of Iranian military personnel, nuclear scientists and civilians. In retaliation, missile strikes by Iran killed 29 Israeli civilians.
Sara Gohari, a 29-year-old Afghan sociology student living in Iran has been detained after traveling to the country’s eastern border to document the forced deportation of Afghan refugees, her lawyer and a rights group said.
The case underscores official sensitivity around a populist push to expel mostly impoverished Afghan migrants citing alleged security concerns after Tehran was worsted in a conflict with Israel.
Her lawyer Reza Shafakhah told Shargh newspaper she has been charged with launching propaganda against the Islamic Republic and photographing prohibited sites.
Since the outbreak of a 12-day war with Israel last month, nearly half a million Afghans have been deported from Iran—many of them facing violence and persecution upon return to Taliban-controlled Afghanistan and enduring inhumane conditions during expulsion, according to UN experts.
Gohari was arrested on July 6 at the Taybad border crossing in Razavi Khorasan province, where she had gone to conduct independent research on Afghan migrants, according to the rights group Hengaw.
The crossing connects Iran to Afghanistan’s Herat province via the town of Islam Qala and is a major transit point used by Iranian authorities in the ongoing mass deportations. The arrest was reportedly carried out without a warrant, and for over 10 days, Gohari's family and legal counsel had no contact with her.
The university of Tehran student had previously posted on Instagram that she intended to collect and share stories of Afghans being forcibly returned from Iran. After her arrest, she was held in solitary confinement for nearly three weeks at the Intelligence Ministry’s detention center in Mashhad before being transferred to Torbat-e Jam Prison, her lawyer said.
The prison is near Mashad, gaining attention gained due to executions, often in connection with drug-related charges
The university student's case was made public on July 22, when her lawyer posted to X that Gohari had been charged with “propaganda against the state.” He said the case is currently under review by the Taybad County Prosecutor’s Office.
In his follow-up interview with Shargh, Shafakhah said authorities have set bail at 500 million tomans (about $10,000), and efforts are underway to secure her temporary release.
Supporters have launched a social media campaign using the hashtag #WhereIsSaraGohari to pressure Iranian authorities for answers on her detention and legal status.
Authorities have released no details about the evidence against Gohari. Her sudden disappearance, extended incommunicado detention, and transfer between facilities have intensified concerns about the Islamic Republic’s treatment of Afghan migrants, students, and researchers.
A Belgian lawmaker of Iranian descent said the European country's police warned her of an Iranian plot to abduct her via Turkey after she backed labeling the Revolutionary Guards a terrorist group.
"Today, the Belgian police and security services contacted me regarding an alarming situation concerning my safety," Darya Safai said on her X account.
"They had received worrying information indicating that the Islamic regime in Iran wants to kidnap me and take me to Tehran via Turkey," she said, adding that she has been advised against visiting Turkey.
Iran has previously been accused of involvement in the kidnapping and killing of foreign nationals in the United Arab Emirates, according to Emirati and Western officials.
In 2020, German-Iranian dissident Jamshid Sharmahd was kidnapped by Iranian operatives from Dubai and forcibly taken to Iran via Oman. He was sentenced to death and executed in what Amnesty called a "grossly unfair trial" in 2023.
Iran also kidnapped dissident journalist Rouhollah Zam from Iraq after luring him to leave Paris for the Arab country in September 2019. He was later sentenced to death and executed in Iran one year later.
Two other dissidents, Masoud Molavi Vardanjani and Saeed Karimian, the owner of Iran-focused satellite broadcaster Gem TV, were also killed by the so-called Zindashti network, a criminal group linked to Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS).
On July 15, the European Union sanctioned the network and its leader Naji Ebrahim Sharifi-Zindashti for carrying out assassinations of Iranian dissidents overseas.
Push for blacklisting IRGC
The Belgian lawmaker said the Islamic Republic is plotting to kidnap her just after her resolution to place the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) on the European terrorist list was approved in the Belgian House of Representatives.
"The regime is now planning to kidnap, torture, and execute a member of parliament from a European country. Or to use it as a bargaining chip in their hostage diplomacy," she said.
Safai called on Western countries to "finally face up to how brazen this regime is."
The IRGC, a powerful branch of Iran’s armed forces, was designated a terrorist organization by the United States in 2019 under President Donald Trump. The United States and Canada have urged their European allies to follow suit.
A third Kurdish environmentalist in less than a week died on Monday from severe burns sustained while battling a wildfire in western Iran, sparking renewed criticism of government mismanagement.
Amini had spent four days in intensive care before succumbing to his injuries. Another activist, Chiako Yousefinejad, died a day earlier in the same hospital.
The first to die from the group was Hamid Moradi, a lawyer and environmental activist from Sanandaj in Iran's Kurdistan province, according to the Kurdistan Human Rights Network (KHRN).
A blaze on Mount Abidar broke out on July 24, prompting a rapid response from local environmentalists and volunteers determined to stop its spread.
But their efforts were hampered by a lack of firefighting resources and proper protective equipment — a chronic issue in the Islamic Republic's handling of environmental disasters.
Their deaths have sparked an outpouring of grief and condemnation from civil society and environmental advocates, many of whom accused authorities of systemic neglect and mismanagement of natural disasters.
Among those voicing outrage was Nobel Peace Prize laureate Narges Mohammadi, who posted a tribute on Instagram calling the men the “brave defenders of Kurdistan’s environment.”
“Hamid, Chiako, and Khabat were consumed by flames so that Mount Abidar would not burn — so that life could remain green,” she wrote.
“We are a people who step in when competence, accountability, and the fulfillment of government duties are absent — a government that not only fails to protect the environment, nature, and the lives of those who care for it, but has turned nature into a battleground for exploitation and the pursuit of power, even at the cost of destruction," Mohammedi added.
Twenty-five environmental defenders have died in forest and grassland fires across Iran over the past decade, according to activists.
Two renowned Iranian filmmakers have condemned authorities for raiding the home of fellow dissident director Ali Ahmadzadeh and seizing his laptop and communication devices.
According to Iranian media, Ahmadzadeh’s residence was raided by several armed agents on July 26. There was no immediate announcement by Iranian judiciary on possible charges or why Ahmadzadeh residence was raided.
However, he is known as a dissident filmmaker and a supporter of protests against the Islamic Republic. He is also among the filmmakers who defy hijab regulations in their underground films.
“Fifty people raided the house of a prolific artist, stole his suitcase, laptop and mobile communication devices and held him at gunpoint, ordering him to appear the next day for questioning,” acclaimed director Jafar Panahi wrote on Instagram on Monday.
Panahi shared video footage from the aftermath of the raid, calling it “state terrorism.”
“This illegitimate power of the government allows them to imprison filmmakers or seize their belongings, but creativity cannot be imprisoned or detained. Iranian filmmakers will continue making their movies,” wrote fellow renowned filmmaker Mohammad Rasoulof in a separate Instagram post.
The raid occurred while Ahmadzadeh was on location filming his new project. He has faced previous restrictions, and some of his films have struggled to gain approval for release in Iran.
Both Panahi and Rasoulof are internationally acclaimed directors whose works have been featured at major film festivals, including Cannes.
Rasoulof was sentenced to eight years in prison in Iran before fleeing the country in 2024. Panahi also won the Palm d'Or at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival for his film "It Was Just an Accident".
Panahi has also previously faced restrictions and imprisonment and is still banned from filmmaking but continues to reside in Tehran and makes his films secretly.
Under Iranian law, all films must obtain government permits before production and receive official approval prior to any public screening.
Ahmadzadeh was arrested in Tehran in 2022 on charges of making a movie without permit.
His film “Critical Zone” won the Golden Leopard award at Locarno film festival in Switzerland in 2023. The movie was also screened at the 41st Haifa International Film Festival in Israel, a taboo in Tehran.
Iran continues to be ranked among the world’s worst countries for press freedom.
According to Reporters Without Borders, “Iran has reinforced its position as one of the most repressive countries in terms of press freedom, with journalists and independent media constantly persecuted through arbitrary arrests and harsh sentences handed down after unfair trials before revolutionary courts.”