Can we do more on the development side to subsidize miners running on green energy?
We can't, and if we had a way to do so -- we shouldn't. I mean why would you subsidize a miner over another miner just based on how they generate energy? As far as Bitcoin is concerned, every hash is worth exactly the same, to me as well, it doesn't matter if a miner generated that hash by burning coal, using a wind turbine, or a pen and paper, what difference does that make to
BTC and everyone else involved in the Bitcoin ecosystem?
If this has to do with making the world a" better place" then that should go to the P&S board because this green energy discussion is rather political, you talk to a bird rights activist and they would tell you how bad fossil fuel is for birds, then you read another study that shows nearly 1 million birds are killed every year by wind turbines in the U.S alone, they say driving conventional cars causes health issue to children but then you read amnesty international reports on how many dozen kids die or face serious deadly health issues while mining cobalt make you doubt which source of energy is actually better for "everyone".
All those climate activists who campaign against
BTC for its Carbon footprint are just fool creatures, they don't understand how the real economy works, besides, if climate really matters,
BTC has a great potential to help the climate by utilizing flare gas which would otherwise be burned in the air adding more pollution, which by the way is already being done.
Furthermore and most importantly, Bitcoin was built in a way that miners would compete in a free market, whereby honest players with the best resources are rewarded the most, for the security and usability of your
BTC, someone who mines 10 blocks using fossil fuel is better than someone who mines only 1 block using "green or whatever you wanna call it" energy, changing the concept will rekt the foundation of a decade long heavily tested algorithm that proved to work perfectly under all conditions.
This is outdated, this was true when China was the biggest mining hub, this isn't the case now, it changed a few years ago, Chinese miners would move their mining gears to Sichuan and other provinces that had hydropower available during the rainy season, usually between May and Sep, but right after the water levels drop they go back to burning coal, miners don't care about any of that green stuff, they would use the cheapest source of energy whenever they find it.