Yes. Mining in the context of your question is really proof-of-work mining. Proof of work is the type of mining used for Bitcoin. Ethereum used to use that same technology, but recently moved to proof of stake.
Brad did a very good job of touching on it. We in the mining industry see it as a potential for significant good in addressing the environmental crisis and helping to fund a faster move to cleaner energy and cleaner technologies. We're seeing incredible innovation happening, with people converting what would otherwise be flare gas or waste gas into Bitcoin mining at flare sites, which keeps that carbon from being emitted into the atmosphere. We're also seeing incredible innovation happening in using landfill waste as a source of energy to be converted into Bitcoin, reducing the landfill emissions.
Brad talked about the work being done in developing nations, where a mine can be set up and help support the creation of new clean energy, a mine that otherwise wasn't able to be created, in part because of the transmission and distribution problems, whereas a Bitcoin mine really can be set up in very remote areas and act as a way to digitize energy. What Bitcoin really is at the end of the day is digitized energy, which can then be transferred in a seamless and decentralized manner.