Key Points
- Swiss policymaker, Samuel Kullmann, has won a majority vote for a Bitcoin mining study focusing on local power infrastructure optimization.
- The proposal’s approval could potentially lead Switzerland towards Bitcoin adoption.
Swiss official Samuel Kullmann recently achieved a significant majority vote for a study on Bitcoin mining. The study aims to enhance the local power infrastructure.
Bitcoin Advocacy and Adoption
Dennis Porter, a Bitcoin advocate, reported that Kullmann’s proposal was approved on November 28. This approval could potentially guide Switzerland towards embracing Bitcoin.
The study will now examine how Bitcoin, the world’s largest decentralized proof-of-work blockchain, can stabilize the Swiss energy grid. It will also look into how it can utilize energy that would otherwise be wasted. Kullmann’s proposal was approved following an 85:46 vote in the Swiss Parliament.
Switzerland’s Interest in Bitcoin
The interest in Bitcoin policy in Switzerland is not unexpected, given the immense interest shown by the Swiss citizens during the Bitcoin halving. Zurich, Switzerland’s largest city, had the highest number of Google searches for Bitcoin halving.
Despite the approval of the U.S. spot Bitcoin exchange-traded fund months earlier, Europe led in Google searches for information about the trillion-dollar cryptocurrency and its code changes. The Bitcoin mining reward is halved every four years to maintain scarcity and control inflation.
In August, it was revealed in financial records that the Swiss Central Bank had purchased shares in MicroStrategy. As the largest corporate Bitcoin holder with a $35 billion treasury, buying MSTR could give investors indirect exposure to the trending digital asset.
Global Bitcoin Adoption
The Bitcoin policy gained momentum globally in 2024, in line with growing worldwide inflation concerns and increased institutional demand for Bitcoin. Lawmakers in the U.S. and Brazil both proposed the creation of strategic national Bitcoin reserves.
Ken Sim, the Mayor of Vancouver, also advocated for diversifying the city’s investments by including Bitcoin in its sovereign balance sheet. Companies around the world allocated millions of dollars to Bitcoin treasuries, following the model established by Michael Saylor’s software giant.