South Carolina has introduced legislation that blocks state and local government entities from accepting or requiring payments made in a central bank digital currency. The law also carves out meaningful protections for cryptocurrency mining and staking operations, making it one of the more comprehensive pro-digital-asset statutes to emerge from a US state legislature this year.

What the law actually does

The legislation, tracked as HB 4256, has two primary thrusts. First, it flatly prohibits any South Carolina state or local government entity from accepting or mandating CBDC-based payments. Second, the law creates a friendlier regulatory environment for digital asset mining and staking. It eases zoning treatment for mining facilities, meaning local governments can’t simply zone crypto miners out of existence the way some municipalities have attempted in other states.

The law also defines certain mining and staking services as non-securities. The bill additionally shields mining and staking operations from certain licensing requirements that might otherwise apply.

The anti-CBDC trend picking up steam