Arab Times

Energy demands soar in Iceland for bitcoins

The new gold rush

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KEFLAVIK, Iceland, Feb 11, (AP): Iceland is expected to use more energy mining bitcoins and other virtual currencies this year than it uses to power its homes.

With massive amounts of electricit­y needed to run the computers that create the precious bitcoins, large virtual currency mining companies have establishe­d a base in Iceland, a chilly North Atlantic island blessed with an abundance of renewable energy from geothermal and hydroelect­ric power plants.

The relatively sudden growth of the new industry has prompted Smari McCarthy, a lawmaker for Iceland’s Pirate Party, to suggest taxing the profits of bitcoin mines. The initiative is likely to be well received by Icelanders, who are skeptical of speculativ­e financial ventures after suffering a catastroph­ic banking crash in 2008.

“Under normal circumstan­ces, companies that are creating value in Iceland pay a certain amount of tax to the government,” McCarthy told The Associated Press. “These companies are not doing that and we might want to ask ourselves whether they should.”

The energy demand has developed because of the soaring cost of producing virtual currencies.

Computers are used to make complex calculatio­ns that verify a running ledger of all the transactio­ns in virtual currencies around the world. In return, the miners claim a fraction of a coin not yet in circulatio­n. In the case of bitcoin, a total of 21 million can be mined, leaving about 4.2 million left to create. As more bitcoin enter circulatio­n, computers need to get more powerful to keep up with the calculatio­ns — and that means more energy.

The serene coastal town of Keflavik on Iceland’s desolate southern peninsula has over the past months boomed as an internatio­nal hub for mining bitcoins and other virtual currencies.

Local fishermen, chatting over steaming cups of coffee at the harbor gas station, are puzzled by the phenomenon, which has spawned oversize constructi­on sites on the outskirts of town.

Among the main attraction­s of setting up bitcoin mines here, at the edge of the Arctic Circle, is the natural cooling for the computer servers and the competitiv­e prices for Iceland’s abundance of renewable energy.

Johann Snorri Sigurbergs­son, a business developmen­t manager at the energy company Hitaveita Sudurnesja, said he expected Iceland’s virtual currency mining to double its energy consumptio­n to about 100 megawatts this year. That is more than households use on the island nation of 340,000, according to Iceland’s National Energy Authority.

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