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Brazil ASIC Tax Cut Could Boost Renewable Mining
#Bitcoin#Mining #trading risk+2 więcej tagów

Brazil ASIC Tax Cut Could Boost Renewable Mining

Brazil quietly lowered import duties on high-efficiency Bitcoin miners while a major utility considered using them to absorb curtailed solar power. Together, the moves hint at a new pathway for turning stranded renewable energy into mining revenue.

Two developments landed in Brazil within 72 hours, and together they form a thesis a lot of people missed: a country with growing renewable curtailment just lowered the friction to import top-tier SHA256 miners, while a major utility openly floated colocating mining at a solar plant to monetize wasted output.

On Feb. 20, Brazil’s foreign trade council published a technical resolution cutting import duties to zero for a narrow class of SHA256 hardware: Bitcoin miners above 200 terahashes per second with energy efficiency below 20 joules per terahash (measured at 35°C). The exemption runs through Jan. 31, 2028.

Three days later, Engie—the French state-owned energy giant—told Reuters it was considering installing Bitcoin miners at its 895-megawatt Assu Sol plant in northeast Brazil (its largest solar facility globally) to monetize curtailed electricity and improve profitability.

This isn’t a story about Brazil “legalizing” mining or announcing a national strategy. It’s about the quiet convergence of three forces: chronic curtailment, lower hardware cost barriers, and generator economics getting squeezed. If those pieces keep aligning, incremental hashrate can flow toward a market most miners weren’t watching.

TLDR

  • Brazil cut import duty to zero for a specific class of high-efficiency SHA256 miners and kept the window open until Jan. 31, 2028.

  • Engie publicly considered colocating miners at a large solar plant to monetize curtailed electricity, framing mining as an industrial demand-response tool.

  • The core trade hinges on curtailment scale, wholesale power pricing, and hash-price volatility.

Why these two signals matter together

Each headline is modest alone. Together, they change incentives.

The tax move reduces one component of the upfront cost of deploying competitive miners. The Engie signal validates the use case: if you’re a generator routinely forced to curtail output, local, dispatchable demand is a way to turn “zero revenue” megawatt-hours into something monetizable—without waiting years for transmission upgrades.

That combination creates a pressure valve: stranded renewable energy becomes the input, mining becomes the conversion mechanism, and the tax cut reduces friction to get the conversion hardware in-country.

The curtailment problem mining can absorb

Brazil’s wind industry curtailed roughly 32 terawatt-hours between October 2021 and September 2025, amounting to about 6 billion reais (around $1.2 billion) in lost revenue. Curtailment happens when the grid can’t absorb electricity being produced—wrong place, wrong time, or insufficient transmission capacity. For renewable generators, curtailed megawatt-hours are destroyed value.

Wind and solar generated about 24% of Brazil’s electricity in 2024, and in August 2025 that share hit 34% for the first time. Grid operator ONS has described curtailment as a structural feature of systems with high shares of variable renewables, not a temporary friction you can wave away.

As renewables penetration rises and transmission buildout lags, the mismatch grows. Generators need local, dispatchable demand that can turn on and off quickly to absorb otherwise-wasted electrons. Mining fits that demand profile precisely, because it can be ramped, interrupted, and colocated at the generation site.

Engie’s Assu Sol plant is in Brazil’s northeast—a region with strong solar irradiance but transmission constraints. Engie told Reuters that mining or storage could make the facility more profitable by monetizing energy that would otherwise be curtailed, while noting that it could take years to implement. That framing matters because it’s coming from a state-owned European utility with no need to sell a crypto narrative.

What the tax change actually does for miners

Resolução GECEX 861, published Feb. 20, amends Brazil’s consolidated ex-tariff list to reduce import duty to zero for specific information technology goods. Annex I adds a line covering servers dedicated to cryptocurrency mining using SHA256 with efficiency measured at 35°C below 20 J/TH and processing capacity above 200 TH/s.

The 0% duty remains in effect through Jan. 31, 2028. It is not a blanket exemption. The thresholds filter for top-tier ASICs. Older or less efficient rigs don’t qualify. That’s important because it targets the hardware class that can compete in professional mining environments as network difficulty evolves.

Brazil’s import tax structure is still layered. Import duty is one component of landed cost, alongside IPI, PIS/COFINS-Import, ICMS, and other charges. Guides often cite total import burdens in the 40%–100% range depending on classification and state treatment. Cutting import duty to zero removes one federal lever but doesn’t eliminate the full stack.

Still, removing one component matters at the margin. It reduces friction for high-efficiency hardware, tightens payback periods, and makes it easier to test colocation economics—especially in a market where the cost of capital and operating complexity already raise the bar.

The break-even power price that decides whether this works

Mining profitability depends on three variables: hash price (revenue per unit of hashrate per day), hardware efficiency, and electricity cost. Everything else—cooling, staffing, facilities, downtime—matters, but these three variables decide whether you’re even in the feasibility zone.

As of Feb. 16, Hashrate Index reported a hash price around $34.05 per PH/s/day. Bitcoin traded near $64,000 on Feb. 23. Using the minimum-qualifying rig under the exemption gives an intuitive baseline.

  • Machine class: 200 TH/s at 20 J/TH

  • Daily revenue: 0.2 PH/s × $34.05 ≈ $6.81/day

  • Power draw: 200 TH/s × 20 J/TH = 4,000 W (4.0 kW)

  • Daily energy: 4.0 kW × 24h = 96 kWh/day

The break-even electricity price (ignoring capex and operating overhead) is about $6.81 ÷ 96 kWh ≈ $0.071/kWh. Converting at the Feb. 23 FX rate of roughly 5.17 reais per dollar puts break-even around 370 reais per MWh.

That immediately explains why miners can’t rely on typical retail power. Retail business electricity in Brazil averaged about 0.657 reais per kWh in June 2025 (roughly 657 reais/MWh), which is far too high for profitable mining under these assumptions.

Wholesale pricing is the difference between impossible and plausible. Spot prices often trade in the 250–450 reais/MWh range, and curtailed energy—by definition—has no better buyer in the moment it is curtailed. If a generator can sell otherwise-lost megawatt-hours to a miner at or below the miner’s break-even, the generator recovers revenue that would otherwise be zero.

That’s the mechanism: curtailment creates stranded value, mining converts stranded value into computation, and the ex-tariff lowers hardware cost enough to tighten the arbitrage window.

What could happen if the thesis plays out

If curtailment persists or grows—driven by renewables buildout outpacing transmission—generators face mounting revenue pressure. Mining offers a bilateral PPA structure that requires no new transmission and can ramp within days of hardware delivery once engineering is complete.

Because the ex-tariff runs through January 2028, miners have a defined window to lock in better hardware economics while testing curtailment monetization. Engie’s pilot framing suggests other utilities and independent power producers will evaluate similar options. If several large renewable projects announce colocation deals over the next 12 months, Brazil becomes a meaningful incremental hashrate destination—because project-level economics align, not because of a national strategy.

Brazil also has some enabling conditions that reduce friction: regulatory clarity around Bitcoin, established banking infrastructure for crypto firms, and no obvious capital controls that would trap mining revenue onshore.

How the same thesis can fail

This setup isn’t guaranteed. The failure modes are straightforward, and they mostly boil down to stranded energy shrinking or mining economics tightening.

  • If transmission upgrades accelerate and reduce curtailment, the stranded energy pool shrinks and power prices rise.

  • If difficulty spikes and hash price compresses below the ~$30/PH/day band, break-even power costs fall below what most curtailment contracts can reliably deliver.

  • If local permitting or interconnection processes create friction for data-center builds, the hardware advantage becomes irrelevant.

  • If the ex-tariff expires in January 2028 without renewal, the import barrier returns.

Key metrics at a glance

BucketMetricValueWhy it matters
Curtailment scaleWind curtailment (Oct 2021–Sep 2025)32 TWhDefines the stranded-value pool mining targets
Curtailment impactWind revenue lost (same period)R$6B (~$1.2B)Shows curtailment is an economics problem
Renewables penetrationWind + solar share (2024)24%Higher VRE share tends to raise congestion pressure
Renewables penetrationWind + solar share (Aug 2025)34%Milestone that signals a structural shift
Policy filterEligible hardwareSHA256, >200 TH/s, <20 J/TH @35°CTargets top-tier ASICs; excludes older rigs
Policy window0% import duty valid throughJan 31, 2028Time-bounded option window
Utility signalEngie Assu Sol plant size895 MWpLarge enough to matter
Mining revenueHash price (Feb 16)$34.05 / PH/s/dayAnchors profitability math
Rig economicsMin-qualifying rig daily revenue~$6.81/dayTies revenue to the eligible machine class
Rig economicsPower draw4.0 kWDefines electricity-cost sensitivity
Rig economicsDaily energy96 kWh/dayMakes break-even intuitive
Break-even powerElectricity break-even$0.071/kWh (~R$370/MWh)The number that decides “works or not”
Price reality checkRetail business electricity (Jun 2025)R$0.657/kWh (R$657/MWh)Shows why miners need wholesale/curtailment pricing
Price reality checkWholesale spot band (often)R$250–450/MWhShows feasibility exists sometimes

The constraint most people skip: financing and uptime

Zero-percent import duty matters, but it doesn’t fix the financing gap. Mining hardware has a useful life measured in difficulty epochs, not decades. Brazil’s cost of capital is higher than in the U.S. or Europe, and local banks have limited appetite for crypto-native credit.

That means miners scaling in Brazil will likely need offshore USD financing or equity structures that can absorb illiquidity. This is a core risk that never shows up in simple “cheap power” narratives.

The other constraint is operational. Mining at renewable plants works best when curtailment is predictable, or when contract structures allow interruptible load with clean settlement. If curtailment becomes sporadic and grid dynamics shift hour-to-hour, uptime suffers and effective revenue per terahash drops.

Engie’s “years to implement” comment implies the company understands this isn’t just signing a PPA and placing containers. You still have engineering, interconnection, metering, cooling, networking, operations, and maintenance to solve—and those details usually determine whether a project works in practice.

And then there are the less obvious risks: local permitting friction, political optics, and the possibility that curtailment rules shift, changing when and how generators can monetize output. Even small administrative fees and compliance overhead can matter when margins are thin.

What Brazil is actually betting on

Brazil didn’t wake up and decide to become a mining hub. It created a targeted cost reduction for hardware that can monetize a structural grid problem, and a state-owned utility publicly tested the narrative almost immediately.

The bet is narrower than it looks: can miners absorb enough curtailed energy to improve generator economics without destabilizing the grid or creating new political friction?

If the answer is yes, Brazil captures incremental hashrate without subsidizing it directly. Miners pay for power, generators recover lost revenue, and the ex-tariff removes friction for the ASIC class that can compete at scale. If the answer is no, the resolution expires in January 2028 and the experiment ends.

Either way, the commitment is reversible, the economics are visible, and the window is open through January 2028. What happens next depends on whether enough miners recognize the opening before it closes.

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