The Borneo Post

Waiting out Bukele’s ‘Bitcoin City’ on a Salvadoran beach

- Oscar Batres

CONCHAGUA, El Salvado: When President Nayib Bukele announced plans to create the world’s first “Bitcoin City,” a futuristic metropolis financed by cryptocurr­ency bonds, American Corbin Keegan packed up his life in Chicago and headed for El Salvador.

More than two years later, no brick has been laid, and 42-year-old Keegan ekes out a living in Playa Blanca, a coastal town in the Conchagua municipali­ty named after the nearby volcano meant to power the new city of which he hopes to be the first resident.

“It’s going to happen. So I’m staying,” he told AFP, sitting in a hammock and sipping coffee as waves crashed on the beach a few meters away.

“I’ll wait as long as it takes.” To fireworks and fanfare, Bukele announced in November 2021 that his “Bitcoin City” would boast everything from residentia­l and commercial areas to museums, an airport and a monument to the currency on its central square.

Bukele said geothermal energy generated by the Conchagua volcano would power the city some 200 kilometers (125 miles) east of the capital San Salvador.

It would also power bitcoin mining -- the massively energy-consuming process by which bitcoin is created using supercompu­ters that solve complex mathematic­al problems.

The president’s announceme­nt came just two months after El Salvador became the first country in the world to adopt bitcoin as legal tender despite a chorus of warnings about the currency’s notorious volatility.

In September 2021, bitcoin traded at about $45,000 and a few months later it reached a record $68,000.

But it later dipped to a low of about $16,000 and is today again hovering around $40,000.

Bukele had promised the issuing of $1 billion in bitcoin bonds, partly to finance his city. But that did not happen.

The government has invested an undisclose­d amount of taxpayer money in the cryptocurr­ency -- vowing at one point it would buy a bitcoin a day -- though it is not known whether this has come to pass.

A poll by the Central American University found that hardly anyone used bitcoin last year in El Salvador, where the other legal tender is the US dollar.

According to the UN, more than a quarter of Salvadoran­s live in poverty, while the US State Department has warned the country’s public debt was “on an unsustaina­ble path.”

Bukele had promoted the move to bitcoin as a way to bring more Salvadoran­s, most of them lacking bank accounts, into the formal economy -- including through the receipt of remittance­s from abroad, a major contributo­r to GDP.

 ?? ?? US bitcoiner Corbin Keegan sits on a motorcycle outside the room he built in the courtyard of a fishermen’s house in Playa Blanca, in the municipali­ty of Conchagua, El Salvado.
US bitcoiner Corbin Keegan sits on a motorcycle outside the room he built in the courtyard of a fishermen’s house in Playa Blanca, in the municipali­ty of Conchagua, El Salvado.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? US bitcoiner Corbin Keegan watches the sea in Playa Blanca, in the municipali­ty of Conchagua, El Salvador.
— AFP photos US bitcoiner Corbin Keegan watches the sea in Playa Blanca, in the municipali­ty of Conchagua, El Salvador.

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