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US Senate draft bill targets AI and crypto data centers with emissions fees

Validated Media

In this post:

  • The US Senate proposes a bill to charge emissions fees on data centers supporting AI and crypto.
  • The Clean Cloud Act directs the EPA to set emissions standards and penalties for high-energy facilities.
  • Bitcoin miners shift to AI data hosting to boost revenue amid falling crypto prices and policy threats.

A draft bill in the US Senate proposes imposing fees on data centers supporting blockchain networks and AI models that surpass federal emissions targets.

The bill, spearheaded by Senate Democrats Sheldon Whitehouse and John Fetterman, is designed to tackle the environmental effects of increasing energy demand while shielding households from higher energy costs, according to Bloomberg.

Key provisions of the Clean Cloud Act and industry reactions

Named the Clean Cloud Act, the proposed legislation requires the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to establish an emissions performance standard for data centers and crypto mining facilities with more than 100 KW of installed IT nameplate power.

The standard would be determined by regional grid emissions intensities, aiming for an 11% annual reduction in emissions. The bill also introduces penalties for surpassing the established limits, starting at $20 per ton of CO2e, with the fine increasing annually by inflation plus an additional $10.

“Surging power demand from crypto miners and data centers is outpacing the growth of carbon-free electricity,” notes a minority blog post on the US Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works website. According to the post data centers, electricity usage will account for up to 12% of the US total power demand by 2028.

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The rapid growth of data centers is projected to generate approximately 2.5 billion metric tons of CO2 emissions globally by the end of the decade, according to research from Morgan Stanley.

Matthew Sigel, VanEck’s head of research, argues that the proposed legislation targets Bitcoin miners and similar operations for their energy consumption in a “Losing ‘Blame the Server Racks’ Strategy,” as he stated in an April 11 post on X.

Moreover, the law may conflict with US policy under President Donald Trump, who reversed a 2023 executive order from former President Joe Biden that set AI safety standards. Trump has also expressed his goal of making the US the “world capital” of both AI and cryptocurrency.

Bitcoin miners pivot to AI data-center hosting

The draft law comes as Bitcoin miners,  including Galaxy, CoreScientific, and Terawulf, increasingly pivot toward supplying high-performance computing (HPC) power for AI models, VanEck said. Still, it has yet to be passed in the Senate.

Bitcoin miners have struggled in 2025 as declining cryptocurrency prices weigh on business models already impacted by the Bitcoin network’s most recent halving.

According to Coin Metrics, miners are “diversifying into AI data-center hosting as a way to expand revenue and repurpose existing infrastructure for high-performance computing.”

See alsoArgentine Congress votes to investigate Libra scheme and government officials

According to Coin Metrics, miners’ incomes began to stabilize in the first quarter of 2025. However, the recovery could be cut short if ongoing trade wars disrupt miners’ business models.

Nicholas Roberts-Huntley, CEO of Concrete & Glow Finance, noted that aggressive tariffs and retaliatory trade policies could create obstacles for node operators, validators, and other core participants in blockchain networks.

He continued to say that the infrastructure supporting crypto, not just the assets, can become collateral damage in times of global uncertainty.

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