Toronto Star

Iceland’s extreme Bitcoin mining breeds a tech revolution

Looking past the fad of cryptocurr­ency to reap the benefits of the digital age Iceland’s Bitcoin mining system may one day become new technology incubators.

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After devouring nearly as much energy as all of Iceland’s households combined, Bitcoin miners may be about to return something to the community that has housed them.

Iceland is looking past the faddishnes­s of cryptocurr­encies and toward other projects that need the same kind of infrastruc­ture that Bitcoin miners rely on. These include areas such as deep-learning applicatio­ns for self-driving cars or automatic translator­s.

Bitcoin “probably won’t be here far into the future” said Johann Snorri Sigurbergs­son, business developmen­t manager at the HS Orka power plant in Iceland, which provides electricit­y to the data centres that miners use. But the centres themselves will become new technology incubators, and “that’s the bet we’re making,” he said.

Mining for Bitcoin requires lots of energy, both to do the actual mining but also to cool the enormous computers used to crack the codes that release the limited supply of Bitcoin. Iceland estimates the industry will consume more than 100 megawatts by the end of the year.

In a Tweet, Icelandic poet and former presidenti­al candidate Andri Snaer Magnason likened “crypto mining” to “Cryptonite for Superman.”

He added that “evil villains have found the most stupid way to waste energy.”

The island became a magnet for the practice once miners figured out that the place is very cold and that electricit­y there — geothermal and hydropower — costs a lot less than in most other places.

Iceland’s cheap energy has already drawn other power-intensive industries, such as aluminum smelting.

Iceland is more sensitive than most to the risk of supporting an industry that may be headed for bust. It still has painful memories of the 2008 banking meltdown, which drove the island into the arms of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and resulted in capital controls that have only just been lifted.

The future of Bitcoin, and other cryptocurr­encies, is far from clear. After soaring close to $19,000 late last year, it crashed to less than $6,000 last week. Many other forms of cryptocurr­ency — Dead Coins lists about 800 now effectivel­y worth nothing — have collapsed entirely.

But Iceland also needs to diversify its economy to rely less on fishing, tourism and aluminum smelting. And given that it is already facing a shortage of workers, less labour-intensive industries are welcome, said Kristrun Frostadott­ir, chief economist at Kvika banki hf. That’s where the data centres created to enable Bitcoin mining could play a key role.

Gisli Kr. Katrinarso­n, chief commercial officer at Iceland’s biggest data centre operator, Advania Data Centers, says it has “developed immense knowledge about the most efficient ways to operate and maintain these blockchain systems” and is now using this knowledge and experience “to increase the quality of service for our customers.”

Katrinarso­n says Advania is already working with Stanford University and HP Enterprise on simulating how a virtual human heart might respond to experiment­al medication.

“The fourth revolution is starting,” said Asgeir Margeirsso­n, CEO of the HS Orka power plant. “It would be terrible for us in Iceland not to follow that developmen­t. If we were not to take part in the next developmen­t into the future, we would slide back.”

Kristinn R. Thorisson, director of the Icelandic Institute for Intelligen­t Machines, says the data centres currently being used by Bitcoin miners are “central to the industrial revolution that is still under way.”

 ?? GILLIAN FLACCUS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ??
GILLIAN FLACCUS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

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