In a tweet Wednesday, Tesla CEO Elon Musk said the electric-car company is discontinuing bitcoin payments.
Tesla had announced it was accepting BTC for car payments starting in February. The announcement came in concert with a $1.5 billion investment in bitcoin as a treasury asset.
Musk has since continued his championship of DOGE, the meme currency currently boasting a market cap of $58 billion, according to CoinDesk data.
Cryptocurrency “cannot come at great cost to the environment,” the electric carmaker said in a statement tweeted by Musk. The statement was hedged, but only slightly, with praise for crypto’s “promising future” and a promise to investigate less energy-hungry networks than Bitcoin’s.
Bitcoin, a proof-of-work (PoW) blockchain reliant on energy-intensive mining units, has come under fire from environmental groups as its price has surged to all-time highs. The second-largest cryptocurrency by market cap, ether, also relies on PoW but is in the process of switching to proof-of-stake.
Tesla's pledge turns up the heat on the race to move bitcoin away from fossil fuels. The company's decision to accept bitcoin was a watershed moment for corporate bitcoin adoption. Tesla's turnabout on environmental matters will likely give fuel to the social and even political moment clamoring for change to the world’s largest cryptocurrency by market cap.
The sudden freeze of Tesla’s bitcoin payments hands a decisive win to bitcoin’s energy critics. But it does not spell doom for Tesla’s remaining bitcoin investment nor its crypto experiment. “Tesla will not be selling any bitcoin,” the statement read. “We intend to use it for transactions as soon as mining transitions to more sustainable energy."
No such plans are publicly known. The most reputable report on the matter says nearly 40% of bitcoin’s energy consumption was carbon-neutral.
Tesla did test the liquidity of the bitcoin market with a $272 million sell announced during its most recent earnings call.
Bitcoin's price is now down nearly 6% over the past 24 hours, though it fell about $2,000 after Musk's tweet.
This is a developing story and will be updated.