Venezuela holds some of the world's largest hydroelectric reserves — and a total ban on the one industry that could monetize them.
Venezuela's government is enforcing a total ban on Bitcoin mining even as its National Assembly advances an energy reform that would open the electricity sector to private capital for the first time, creating a policy contradiction that leaves billions of dollars in stranded hydroelectric capacity untapped.
"The mining ban does not come from an explicit law but from a regulatory vacuum and changing administrative directives," according to an analysis published by Crypto Economy on June 5. The National Superintendency of Cryptoassets (Sunacrip), once the industry's regulator, is now paralyzed by corruption scandals and internal power struggles, leaving miners without a counterparty for power contracts or import permits.
The energy reform, approved in a first discussion by the National Assembly, would authorize private participation in electricity generation through concessions of up to 25 years with rates reflecting real production costs. Proponents see it as a way to reverse the collapse of national infrastructure and monetize the enormous volumes of energy wasted daily — particularly in the south, where the Caroní River dams produce more power than the grid can transport or consume. Yet the same government has deployed military operations to seize ASIC mining equipment and offers rewards for reporting clandestine mining operations.
The contradiction carries real economic consequences. Countries including Bhutan, Texas, and Paraguay have demonstrated that Bitcoin miners can act as flexible consumers — absorbing surplus energy when supply exceeds demand and disconnecting during peak hours — turning stranded electricity into foreign currency. Venezuela's Caroní River basin could support mining operations on a scale ten times larger than Bhutan's entire hydro-powered mining sector, the analysis said. Without an explicit repeal of the mining ban and a stable legal framework offering 25-year certainty, the energy surplus will continue to be wasted and electrical infrastructure will degrade without financing.
The Regulatory Vacuum at the Core
Sunacrip's paralysis is the root cause of the policy incoherence. Once responsible for licensing and overseeing crypto mining operations, the agency has been effectively sidelined by internal corruption probes and political infighting. In the absence of clear rules, mining investments become a high-stakes gamble: authorities may tolerate operations one day and raid facilities the next, seizing equipment without compensation.
The reform's most controversial clauses compound the problem. Provisions allowing the reversion of assets to the state at the end of a concession, and the possibility of discretionary intervention, could deter the very capital the reform seeks to attract. Private investors facing the risk of expropriation without fair compensation will allocate resources to jurisdictions with stable regulatory frameworks, even at higher energy costs.
What Venezuela Could Learn From Bhutan and Texas
The technical justification for the ban — protecting the National Electric System from collapse due to decades of underinvestment — has a grain of truth. The grid is fragile, and any additional consumption could accelerate blackouts. But Bitcoin mining does not have to be an extra burden. Managed as a manageable load, miners can finance the rehabilitation of the system itself by purchasing surplus energy at competitive prices, with revenues used to repair transformers and transmission lines.
El Salvador has explored geothermal mining using volcanic energy. Bhutan uses its hydroelectric dams to mine Bitcoin and finances social projects with the proceeds. Venezuela, with the Caroní River, could operate on a scale dwarfing both — but only if the government shifts its view of miners from electricity smugglers to industrial partners.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.