The Guardian (USA)

Why bitcoin entreprene­urs are flocking to rural Texas

- Lauren Aratani

In the middle of rural Texas, a cryptocurr­ency mine is currently under constructi­on.

Hundreds of machines more powerful than the average computer will soon be housed in this 320-acre mining facility in Dickens county, where they will work day and night to solve a complex series of algorithms. If successful, the reward will be newly minted bitcoin, currently worth about $44,000 each.

All the machines need to thrive are spaces to sit and electricit­y – lots of it.

Kevin Brendle, Dickens county’s top elected official, embraced the idea of the mine when Argo Blockchain, a Canadian cryptocurr­ency mining company, first approached him with the idea of building a facility in the area. Dickens county, population 2,300, “is mostly improved pasture and grassland”, Brendle said.

“It’s wide-open range land, it’s cattle country with a little farming,” he said. “We don’t have a lot of economic developmen­t.”

A mine could help stimulate the economy, creating jobs and improving the county’s tax base. And in return, the mine will be powered by some of the cheapest electricit­y in the world.

To be profitable, mining cryptocurr­ency requires lots of cheap energy. China was once the main hub for mining, with over half of the world’s mining taking place in the country, precisely because its electricit­y is cheap. But earlier this summer, local government­s in China began to shut down bitcoin mines as the country works to develop its own, better-controlled digital currency. The bitcoin hashrate – the processing power used to produce bitcoin – halved after the crackdown.

Miners have since been scouring the globe for places where electricit­y is cheap, and many have settled on Texas as their destinatio­n.

Texas’s power grid is deregulate­d, which means customers can choose between different power providers and providers are thus incentiviz­ed to provide low rates.

Mining facilities can set up longterm contracts with power providers that allows them to purchase electricit­y at a fixed price for many years, says Jason Les, CEO of Riot Blockchain, a US-based cryptocurr­ency mining company.

Riot Blockchain recently acquired Whinstone US, the largest bitcoin mining facility in the US based in Rockdale, Texas, for $80m. Whinstone says its facility can produce 500 bitcoin per month – worth a total of $22m at bitcoin’s current value.

When demand for electricit­y goes up, particular­ly in the summer months,

Texas power companies will actually pay mining facilities to lower their energy usage.

“If you were a miner that has a longterm power purchase agreement, then you own power at a fixed price … you’re committing to buying energy for years no matter what,” Les said.

“As a bitcoin miner, you essentiall­y own that power, and that allows you to work like a virtual power plant. You can take the power that you agreed to buy at a fixed lower price, and then you can sell that back to the grid.”

In recent months, Texas leaders have been vocal about their support of cryptocurr­ency mining coming to their state.

In June, Governor Greg Abbott signed into law a bill that puts cryptocurr­ency under commercial law, making it easier for cryptocurr­ency businesses to operate in the state.

In the same month, Abbott, tweeted: “Texas will be the cryptocurr­ency leader!” after the Texas grocery chain HE-B announced that it will be putting cryptocurr­ency kiosks in some of its stores.

Also making the state attractive to miners is that 20% of its energy comes from wind power, making mining in Texas a much greener alternativ­e than mining in China, where about twothirds of electricit­y comes from coal. Tesla’s CEO, Elon Musk, halted his company’s acceptance of bitcoin transactio­ns, citing the “rapidly increasing use of fossil fuels for bitcoin mining and transactio­ns, especially coal, which has the worst emissions of any fuel”. Musk said that Tesla will resume accepting bitcoin once there’s confirmati­on that about half of the energy used by miners will be from clean energy.

While states like Kentucky and

Louisiana also have cheap power, and others like Wyoming – which recently made it easier for cryptocurr­ency businesses to become LLCs – have politician­s that are cryptocurr­ency-friendly, Texas is the only state that seems to offer miners the best of both worlds.

“We’ve seen a good combinatio­n of political will with the reality of the electricit­y market there that have led people to start building in Texas,” said Josh Goodbody, chief operating office of Qredo, a digital asset management company. “Increasing­ly, people are looking at Texas as a friendly place to build crypto businesses.”

Along with the Argo and Whinstone facilities, BIT Mining, a Chinese mining company, has invested $25m to build a mine in Texas.

An influx of interest from cryptocurr­ency businesses does not come without risk, though. Bitmain, a Chinabased company, said in 2018 that it would invest $500m to build a huge mining facility in Rockdale, bringing jobs to a community that has seen huge job losses after a coal plant closure in 2008. But after the price of bitcoin dropped to just over $3,000 in the fall, the company pulled out of the project.

Brendle, of Dickens, said that his optimism is cautious. He has hope that cryptocurr­ency mining will be able to bolster his county’s economy and give stable jobs to some of his residents, but he notes that long-term sustainabi­lity is important.

“We see movement now, we see a lot of interest. We understand why that interest is there. But we just don’t know what the future of bitcoin mining is,” Brendle said. “I think that’s the biggest concern right now is how long, how well the industry will sustain itself.”

 ?? Texas. Photograph: Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Hundreds of machines more powerful than the average computer will soon be housed in this 320-acre mining facility in Dickens county,
Texas. Photograph: Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Hundreds of machines more powerful than the average computer will soon be housed in this 320-acre mining facility in Dickens county,

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