yeah, i just did the math on it. the power cost for a 1 million qbit at current power draw based on qbit count is 49 million to crack one pubkey in 13 days, assuming cheap american $0.16USD per kWH.
afaik, the biggest quantum computer that currently exists is 10k qbits, i'm pretty sure that both the energy infrastructure and cooling costs are exponential for the necessary 100 scaleup required to get a 1M qbit system running. it's not even economic to try and crack a pubkey on a UTXO of less than probably about 1000 bitcoin as well, so it's no threat to the majority of the UTXOs on chain.
while the energy cost for non-quantum supercomputers is a lot higher for comparable computational capability, it's only like twice as efficient. the real blocker for any attack on bitcoin is still economic.
plus, as i also dug around and researched options for post quantum algorithms with problems that are still hard for quantum advantaged algorithms, and VDOO signatures weigh in at 96 bytes, and would probably require upgrading the pubkey hash to 256 bits (hash functions are unaffected) so the actual worst case scenario for bitcoin is it has to have 8mb blocks and it would take a week or two for everyone to move their UTXOs to the new signatures.
not only is the threat nearly zero as it is, with countermeasures in place, which is totally viable in 10 years, it is basically then as close to zero as it can get.
it's just a hype boondoggle to lure gullible investors into paying for the extremely expensive development costs required for this technology, and cracking bitcoin keys would be the most lucrative end goal, which i just covered.