Trump Signs Quantum Computing Orders — What Does This Mean For Bitcoin?

Bitcoin Magazine

Trump Signs Quantum Computing Orders — What Does This Mean For Bitcoin?

President Donald Trump signed two executive orders Monday aimed at cementing U.S. dominance in quantum computing while accelerating the federal government’s transition to encryption that can withstand quantum attacks. 

The move carries significant implications for Bitcoin and the broader crypto industry, which has long been warned that a sufficiently powerful quantum computer could crack the cryptographic foundations underpinning digital assets.

The first order, titled Ushering in the Next Frontier of Quantum Innovation, sets an ambitious target: a “scientifically relevant” quantum computer deployed at a national laboratory or Department of Energy facility by 2028. 

The order also directs the Departments of Commerce, Energy, and Defense alongside NASA to develop deployment plans for quantum sensors and networking technologies within five years.

White House science advisor Michael Kratsios framed the orders as a continuation of Trump’s first-term quantum push. 

“President Trump has long recognized the importance of quantum as an economic and national security imperative,” Kratsios said before the signing. 

The second order is where Bitcoin holders should pay close attention. It moves the federal deadline for adopting post-quantum cryptography from 2035 to December 2031 — a four-year acceleration — and directs NIST to complete a pilot migration of federal systems by the end of 2027. 

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has also been tasked with helping critical infrastructure operators make the shift.

The concern for Bitcoin is what researchers call “Q-Day” — the moment a quantum computer becomes powerful enough to reverse-engineer private keys from public addresses, effectively allowing an attacker to drain any exposed wallet. Coinbase’s advisory council has warned that roughly 7 million BTC could eventually be vulnerable, a figure representing tens of billions of dollars in exposed holdings.

Quantum-resistant bitcoin 

In March, Google set its own 2029 deadline. BTQ Technologies launched a Bitcoin testnet built around BIP-360, a quantum-resistance proposal, while developers have since proposed BIP-361, which would freeze BTC held in vulnerable legacy addresses if owners fail to migrate. 

Other networks like Stellar have unveiled a migration roadmap earlier this month, and Algorand has pledged broad quantum resilience by 2027 — but Bitcoin, whose security model has remained largely unchanged since Satoshi’s whitepaper, has no mandatory upgrade path. 

Trump’s orders don’t necessarily regulate crypto directly, but by pulling the federal deadline four years closer, they send somewhat of a signal: Q-Day is no longer a distant hypothetical, and the window to harden Bitcoin may be narrower than the industry assumes.

This post Trump Signs Quantum Computing Orders — What Does This Mean For Bitcoin? first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

 

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