Business Standard

Bitcoin miners eye N-power as environmen­tal criticism mounts

Firms aim to bring advanced fission to energy-intensive process of minting new coins, diversify energy sources used by miners

- VILDANA HAJRIC & WILL WADE

Amid a heated debate over Bitcoin’s environmen­tal toll, two companies say they have an answer on mitigating some of the negative effects: Nuclear energy.

Power startup Oklo Inc. said it’s partnering with Bitcoin mining and hosting firm Compass Mining to introduce advanced fission to the energy-intensive process of minting new coins. It’s an effort, the companies say, to reduce fossil-fuel emissions from Bitcoin mining and to diversify energy sources used by the miners, who compete to verify transactio­ns in exchange for new coins.

“Bitcoin is a huge market opportunit­y for clean energy generation, especially looking forward for new generation systems,” said Oklo Chief Executive Officer Jacob Dewitte, who founded the company with Caroline Cochran in 2013.

Oklo, based in Sunnyvale, California, said its advanced fission reactors will be able to start supplying clean energy soon, according to a statement. It plans to provide Compass with at least 150 megawatts of clean power in the first phase of the 20-year partnershi­p. Terms weren’t disclosed.

Oklo sees opportunit­ies for its partnershi­p with Compass to take place in the US, though nuclear-powered Bitcoin mining could be years away. The company is still in the process of seeking approval from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission for its variety of small reactors that could run on radioactiv­e waste. It submitted an applicatio­n in March 2020, right before the Covid pandemic shut the US economy down, and the regulator accepted it for review about three months later. Dewitte said the NRC is mandated to conduct reviews within three years.

The announceme­nt comes amid an extended debate over the impact Bitcoin mining may have on the environmen­t. Crypto miners use vast sums of computing power and energy to verify transactio­ns on the blockchain, or decentrali­sed ledger that underpins the digital token. Their energy use is comparable to that of many developed countries and rivals the emissions from major fossil-fuel users and producers such as airlines and oil-services firms, according to an analysis by Bank of America Corporatio­n, though others dispute that, arguing it’s no worse than the carbon footprint of cars, power plants and factories.

Oklo is part of a wave of companies developing smaller reactors that they say would be faster and cheaper to build than convention­al nuclear plants. Such reactors could be small and would generate a lot of power without harmful emissions.

And it’s not the only one to work on this. Energy Harbor Corporatio­n, a power producer, said earlier this week that it’s entered into a five-year partnershi­p with Standard Power to provide carbon-free electricit­y from its nuclear fleet to Standard Power’s Bitcoin mining center in Coshocton, Ohio. That’s set to begin at the end of the year, according to a release.

Assuming it receives approval, Oklo will be looking at sites in Idaho — near Idaho Falls — as well as in Alaska, and other sites across the US, according to Dewitte. Internatio­nally, the company sees opportunit­ies in central, southern and eastern Europe as well as across the Americas, among other spots.

Oklo offers what Dewitte calls fission-as-a-service, meaning it sells power and heat in a way that will make it easier for customers to be able to buy. The new partnershi­p with Compass is a “matching of opportunit­ies,” he said, and helps accelerate Oklo’s deployment of its product. “We now have opportunit­ies to basically support deploying a lot of reactors relatively quickly.”

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