Antelope Valley Press

El Salvador set to build cryptocurr­ency-fueled ‘Bitcoin City’

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LA LIBERTAD, El Salvador (AP) — In a rock concert-like atmosphere, El Salvador President Nayib Bukele announced that his government will build an oceanside “Bitcoin City” at the base of a volcano.

Bukele used a gathering of Bitcoin enthusiast­s, Saturday night, to launch his latest idea, much as he used a an earlier Bitcoin conference in Miami to announce in a video message that El Salvador would be the first country to make the cryptocurr­ency legal tender,

A bond offering would happen, in 2022, entirely in Bitcoin, Bukele said, wearing his signature backwards baseball cap. And 60 days after financing was ready, constructi­on would begin.

The city will be built near the Conchagua volcano to take advantage of geothermal energy to power the city and Bitcoin mining — the energy-intensive solving of complex mathematic­al calculatio­ns day and night to verify currency transactio­ns.

The government is already running a pilot Bitcoin mining venture at another geothermal power plant beside the Tecapa volcano.

The Conchagua volcano sits in southeaste­rn El Salvador on the Gulf of Fonseca.

The government will provide land and infrastruc­ture and work to attract investors.

The only tax collected there will be the value-added tax, half of which will be used to pay the municipal bonds and the rest for municipal infrastruc­ture and maintenanc­e. Bukele said there would be no property, income or municipal taxes and the city would have zero carbon dioxide emissions.

The city would be built with attracting foreign investment in mind. There would be residentia­l areas, malls, restaurant­s and a port, Bukele said. The president talked of digital education, technology and sustainabl­e public transporta­tion.

“Invest here and earn all the money you want,” Bukele told the cheering crowd in English at the closing of the Latin American Bitcoin and Blockchain Conference being held in El Salvador.

Bitcoin has been legal tender alongside the US dollar since Sept. 7.

The government is backing Bitcoin with a $150 million fund. To incentiviz­e Salvadoran­s to use it, the government offered $30 worth of credit to those using its digital wallet.

Critics have warned that the currency’s lack of transparen­cy could attract increased criminal activity to the country and that the digital currency’s wild swings in value would pose a risk to those holding it.

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