In Malaysia’s illegal Bitcoin (BTC) mining hotspots, the hunt begins in the sky. Drones buzz over rows of shops and abandoned houses, sweeping for pockets of unexpected heat, which is the thermal signature of machines that shouldn’t be running. On the ground, police carry handheld sensors that sniff out irregular power use. Sometimes the pursuit […] The post Bitcoin thieves stole $1.1B using fake bird noises: Now Malaysia hunts heat signatures from the sky appeared first on CryptoSlate.In Malaysia’s illegal Bitcoin (BTC) mining hotspots, the hunt begins in the sky. Drones buzz over rows of shops and abandoned houses, sweeping for pockets of unexpected heat, which is the thermal signature of machines that shouldn’t be running. On the ground, police carry handheld sensors that sniff out irregular power use. Sometimes the pursuit […] The post Bitcoin thieves stole $1.1B using fake bird noises: Now Malaysia hunts heat signatures from the sky appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Bitcoin thieves stole $1.1B using fake bird noises: Now Malaysia hunts heat signatures from the sky

In Malaysia’s illegal Bitcoin (BTC) mining hotspots, the hunt begins in the sky.

Drones buzz over rows of shops and abandoned houses, sweeping for pockets of unexpected heat, which is the thermal signature of machines that shouldn’t be running.

On the ground, police carry handheld sensors that sniff out irregular power use. Sometimes the pursuit is more low-tech: residents call in with complaints of strange bird noises, only for officers to discover nature sounds being used to mask the roar of machinery behind closed doors.

The surveillance net exists because the scale of the problem demands it. As a local news outlet reported, between 2020 and August 2025, authorities caught 13,827 premises stealing electricity for crypto mining, mostly Bitcoin.

Losses are pegged at roughly 4.6 billion ringgit, worth about $1.1 billion, according to state-owned energy company Tenaga Nasional (TNB) and the Energy Transition and Water Transformation Ministry.

By early October, with Bitcoin hitting record highs before collapsing by more than 30% and rebounding, authorities had logged around 3,000 power-theft cases tied to mining.

The miners they’re chasing are careful. They hop from empty storefronts to deserted houses, installing heat shields to cloak the glow of their rigs.

They equip entrances with CCTV cameras, heavy-duty security, and broken-glass deterrents to keep unwanted visitors out.

This cat-and-mouse game has been running for years, but the numbers suggest it’s accelerating.

TNB has reported that crypto-linked electricity theft rose nearly 300% over the past six years, with cumulative losses of roughly 3.4 billion ringgit between 2018 and 2023 alone.

Adding earlier years, the true bill from Bitcoin power theft inches closer to 8 billion ringgit. In Perak, landlords have been left with millions in unpaid TNB bills because tenants ran illegal mining operations and walked away, forcing owners to either chase them or absorb the charges.

The sensor grid behind the crackdown

What began as simple meter checks has evolved into a multi-layered surveillance operation.
TNB’s control room now watches transformer-level smart meters for unexplained losses.

These Distribution Transformer Meters, part of a pilot program, record the amount of power flowing into a neighborhood circuit in real time.

If the sum of the customer meters underneath looks too low, operators know power is being diverted somewhere in that cluster.

Anomalies kick out a list of target streets. Teams then overfly those streets with thermal drones at night and walk them with handheld load sensors. That turns what used to be “knock and peek behind every roller shutter” into a guided search.

The drones pick up heat signatures from suspected mining clusters, and the sensors confirm irregular draws.

A 2022 Tenaga briefing already described the use of drones alongside conventional meter inspections, which gives the operation a clear arc: basic enforcement first, then data-driven monitoring as the problem scales.

The utility has also built an internal database that links suspicious premises to owners and tenants.
The energy ministry says that the database is now the reference point for inspections and raids tied to Bitcoin-related power theft.

It addresses a persistent enforcement problem: equipment is often registered to shell entities, and premises are rented or sublet, which dilutes conviction risk even when raids succeed.

On Nov. 19, the government rolled out a cross-agency special committee staffed by the Finance Ministry, Bank Negara Malaysia, and TNB to coordinate a crackdown. The deputy energy minister, Akmal Nasrullah Mohd Nasir, who chairs the panel, frames the risk as existential.

In a recent report by Bloomberg News, he stated:

Overloaded transformers, fires, and localized blackouts are now part of the equation.

There is an open discussion inside that committee about recommending an outright ban on Bitcoin mining, even when operators pay for power.

Nasir is blunt:

He has also suggested the pattern of mobile sites points to organized criminal syndicates running the show, adding that it is “clearly run by the syndicate, because of how mobile they are from setting up in one place to another place. It does have modus operandi.”

The economics of meter-tampering

The core economic logic is simple: heavily subsidized grid power, a high-priced asset, and almost no labor.

Malaysia’s domestic tariffs have historically been low, with stepped residential rates starting around 21.8 sen per kilowatt-hour for the first 200 kWh and rising to around 51-57 sen for higher bands.

After a long freeze, the base tariff increased in 2025 to around 45.4 sen per kWh for the 2025/2027 regulatory period, and high-usage customers now face additional surcharges on consumption above 600 kWh a month.

Even so, analysts and crypto sites summarizing the ministry’s numbers describe Malaysia’s effective electricity prices as roughly $0.01-$0.05 per kWh, depending on class and subsidy.

For a miner running dozens or hundreds of ASICs around the clock, the difference between paying even those subsidized tariffs and paying nothing is the difference between marginal profits and very fat ones.

That creates the incentive to bypass meters entirely.

In many raids, investigators find cables tapped directly into overhead lines or incoming mains before the meter, so that the recorded consumption for the property appears to be that of a normal small shop or house while the transformer supplying it runs at several times the expected load.

Akmal has explicitly tied the surge in theft to Bitcoin’s price, noting in July that with BTC above about 500,000 ringgit per coin, more operators are “willing to take the risk of stealing electricity for mining.”

The downside exists, but feels diluted. The Electricity Supply Act allows for fines up to 1 million ringgit and up to 10 years in prison for meter tampering, and police data show hundreds of arrests and tens of millions of ringgit in seized equipment over the last few years.

But syndicate structures soften the blow: equipment is registered to shells, premises are sublet, and the people actually running the rigs are rarely the ones holding the lease.

There’s also a system-level opportunity cost. Malaysia is trying to decarbonize its grid by shifting away from coal toward gas and solar, while also powering a wave of data centers.

Every stolen kilowatt-hour is power that could have gone to paying industrial and digital economy customers instead of subsidizing underground farms.

Where do they go when the lights go out

Locally, the geography of evasion is striking. Illegal miners in peninsular Malaysia hop between empty shoplots, abandoned houses, and partially vacant malls, installing heat shields, CCTV, and even broken-glass strips over entrances to slow down raids.

One viral example was a massive operation in the mostly empty ElementX Mall near the Strait of Malacca, which only cleared out after TikTok footage spread.

In Sarawak, officials have found mining gear hidden in remote logging yards or buildings deep inside forested areas, with direct taps into overhead lines.

What tends to happen after a crackdown is not that miners disappear, but that hash power migrates to the next-cheapest or least-enforced grid.

Globally, the pattern is clear: China’s 2021 mining ban triggered the “Great Mining Migration,” with fleets of machines heading to Kazakhstan, North America, and other energy-rich jurisdictions.

When Kazakhstan later clamped down on unregistered miners and power station kickbacks, some of that hardware moved again, including into Russia and other parts of Central Asia.

In 2025, newer echoes of that same dynamic are playing out across the region. Kuwait is in the middle of a sweeping crackdown, raiding homes that were using up to 20 times the normal amount of electricity and blaming miners for worsening a power crisis.

Laos, which initially courted miners with excess hydropower, is now planning to cut off electricity to crypto operations by early 2026 to redirect power to AI data centers, metal refining, and EV manufacturing.

China itself, despite its 2021 ban, has seen underground mining rebound to an estimated 14% to 20% of global hashrate by late 2025 as operators exploit cheap electricity and overbuilt data-center infrastructure in energy-rich provinces.

Malaysia is slotting into this broader pattern. When enforcement tightens in one region with cheap or subsidized power, miners either go further underground in that country, into remote buildings, with better camouflage and more aggressive meter-tapping, or they hop to the next jurisdiction where the math still works, and the risk feels manageable.

Akmal all but spells this out, arguing that the mobility of sites and the speed with which rigs can be moved point to syndicate-style operations rather than hobbyists.

The stakes are no longer just about theft. They’re about whether Malaysia can protect grid infrastructure that is supposed to finance a green transition and a data-center boom, or whether it becomes another way station in the global hunt for cheap electrons, one drone sweep at a time.

The post Bitcoin thieves stole $1.1B using fake bird noises: Now Malaysia hunts heat signatures from the sky appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Market Opportunity
1 Logo
1 Price(1)
$0.007799
$0.007799$0.007799
+3.42%
USD
1 (1) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

The Top 10 Altcoins Most Purchased by Investors in 2025 Have Been Revealed! There’s a Trump Detail Too!

The Top 10 Altcoins Most Purchased by Investors in 2025 Have Been Revealed! There’s a Trump Detail Too!

The post The Top 10 Altcoins Most Purchased by Investors in 2025 Have Been Revealed! There’s a Trump Detail Too! appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Top
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/25 17:36
The high premium of silver funds has attracted attention; Guotou Silver LOF will be suspended from trading from the opening of the market on December 26 until 10:30 a.m. on the same day.

The high premium of silver funds has attracted attention; Guotou Silver LOF will be suspended from trading from the opening of the market on December 26 until 10:30 a.m. on the same day.

PANews reported on December 25th that Guotou Silver LOF announced it will suspend trading from the market opening on December 26th until 10:30 AM, resuming trading
Share
PANews2025/12/25 17:10
Why The Green Bay Packers Must Take The Cleveland Browns Seriously — As Hard As That Might Be

Why The Green Bay Packers Must Take The Cleveland Browns Seriously — As Hard As That Might Be

The post Why The Green Bay Packers Must Take The Cleveland Browns Seriously — As Hard As That Might Be appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Jordan Love and the Green Bay Packers are off to a 2-0 start. Getty Images The Green Bay Packers are, once again, one of the NFL’s better teams. The Cleveland Browns are, once again, one of the league’s doormats. It’s why unbeaten Green Bay (2-0) is a 8-point favorite at winless Cleveland (0-2) Sunday according to betmgm.com. The money line is also Green Bay -500. Most expect this to be a Packers’ rout, and it very well could be. But Green Bay knows taking anyone in this league for granted can prove costly. “I think if you look at their roster, the paper, who they have on that team, what they can do, they got a lot of talent and things can turn around quickly for them,” Packers safety Xavier McKinney said. “We just got to kind of keep that in mind and know we not just walking into something and they just going to lay down. That’s not what they going to do.” The Browns certainly haven’t laid down on defense. Far from. Cleveland is allowing an NFL-best 191.5 yards per game. The Browns gave up 141 yards to Cincinnati in Week 1, including just seven in the second half, but still lost, 17-16. Cleveland has given up an NFL-best 45.5 rushing yards per game and just 2.1 rushing yards per attempt. “The biggest thing is our defensive line is much, much improved over last year and I think we’ve got back to our personality,” defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz said recently. “When we play our best, our D-line leads us there as our engine.” The Browns rank third in the league in passing defense, allowing just 146.0 yards per game. Cleveland has also gone 30 straight games without allowing a 300-yard passer, the longest active streak in the NFL.…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:41