5.5 million people. That’s almost 0.5% of all electricity consumption
worldwide, and a 10 times jump from just five years ago”.
Such concerns has led the Tesla founder, Elon Musk to not accept
any payment in terms of Bitcoin for any business transactions in the
organization. Apart from many regulations and security concerns,
Bitcoin has serious technical limitations such as slow execution time
and high transaction fees. Transactions in the Bitcoin network take
10 minutes to get committed and the average transaction fee is
almost $23 today. Whosoever has worked in Bitcoin would be very
well aware of its throughput which is about 24 transactions per
second or TPS which is too slow to be considered for payments in
the mainstream.
Obviously, such limitations would be a road-blocker for a Bitcoin or a
similar Blockchain network to get into the mainstream, as they
cannot compete with the legacy of the centralized systems such as
VISA that runs almost at 24,000 TPS. Hence, it’s only obvious that
the next generation of Blockchains have to overcome such
limitations by improving their capabilities with better architecture.
1.12 Areas of research and improvement
The following are some of the areas where most of the Blockchain
protocols have worked to come up with a better speed for execution
with a lower cost:
Consensus models
Scalability,
Performance
(i.e.,
faster
finality
and
high
transactions per second or TPS)
Transaction fees
L2 Solutions
1.12.1 Consensus Model
The primary reason for the Bitcoin’s poor performance is because of
its consensus model. The PoW consensus model works on a voting
system that needs to wait to gather 51% consensus from the nodes