National Post

NORDIC REGION GETS BITCOIN BOOST,

Nordic region an alternativ­e to Canada, China

- Jesper Starn

The Nordic region once again has become a lucrative place to mine cryptocurr­encies, thanks to a plunge in electricit­y prices.

The wettest weather in at least 20 years boosted production from hydroelect­ric plants, leaving Sweden and Norway with some of the lowest power prices in the world. The resulting glut in the most important raw material for making the virtual coins coincided with a year when the price of Bitcoin almost quadrupled.

The currencies are made in giant computer farms that process complex algorithms in halls as big as airport hangars. That makes electricit­y one of the key inputs, with operations sometimes consuming as much power as that used by 70,000 households. The current market dynamics give big miners alternativ­es to places where Bitcoin are usually created such as China, Kazakhstan and Canada.

Their luck follows several years of poor margins from higher electricit­y costs and lower prices for most virtual currencies. Many of the miners that were attracted to the region during the last rally in 2017 have left.

“The ones that stayed through the difficult period, like us, are quite happy now,” said Philip Salter, head of operations at Hong Kong- based Genesis Mining Ltd., which operates a data centre in Boden, Sweden. “There were times we were not making any profit at all, but during the last year our profitabil­ity has more than tripled.”

Unusually wet weather along with mild temperatur­es boosted hydro reservoirs across the Nordic region to the highest level in more than 20 years, leaving the area awash in generation capacity. The result is power prices close to zero for extended periods. Average prices this year are about a third of those in Germany.

Norway had the lowest electricit­y prices for industrial users last year among the 30 member-nations in the Internatio­nal Energy Agency. It also had the lowest prices for non-households in the European Union during first half of this year, narrowly beating Iceland, another cryptocurr­ency hotspot.

“These prices are some of the lowest you can find in the world if you disregard fees and taxes,” said Tor Reier Lilleholt, head of analysis at Norwegian consultant Wattsight AS. “What we saw this summer was that the low levels registered over such a long time.”

The main environmen­tal benefit from basing the mining in the Nordic region is that the electricit­y is almost carbon-free, consisting mostly of hydro, nuclear and wind power. That is becoming increasing­ly important for the many institutio­nal investors attracted to cryptocurr­encies and one of the main factors behind the latest price surge. Having coin flowing from the Nordic region helps reduce the political risk profile of Bitcoin.

“There is a very important strategic shift away from mining in China to mining in western countries like Sweden as Bitcoin investors become more public and want more stability and critical safety,” said Salter at Genesis. “It is one of the biggest developmen­ts in Bitcoin mining to look out for.”

Comparing electricit­y prices around the world is difficult since they vary between industries and regions due to taxes, fees and subsidies. One attempt by the World Bank, which measures the bills of an imaginary warehouse in the capital of each nation, puts Sweden and Norway well below China but above other centres for making cryptocurr­ency, like Kazakhstan and Mongolia.

The cost of power is poised to become even more significan­t for miners. The hash- rate, the amount of calculatio­n needed to produce each coin, is steadily increasing. And in May, miners’ rewards were cut by a so- called halving, a reduction in the amount of tokens they receive as a way to maintain scarcity.

Many of the miners that left the region after the 2017-18 boom and bust could return. The November announceme­nt of $35 million investment from Dutch blockchain company Bitfury Holding BV to expand their Norwegian site could mark the start of a new trend.

“We have seen a notable up-tick in investor appetite for Bitcoin mining opportunit­ies in Norway,” said Tyler Page, a business developer at Bitfury. “This year’s energy prices were particular­ly low as Bitcoin prices have increased.”

 ?? HALLDOR KOLBEINS / AFP via Gett y Images files ?? Philip Salter, head of operations at Genesis Mining, in the bitcoin factory near Reykjavik. At the heart of Iceland’s lava fields stands one of the world’s largest bitcoin
factories at a secret location rich in renewable energy, which runs the computers.
HALLDOR KOLBEINS / AFP via Gett y Images files Philip Salter, head of operations at Genesis Mining, in the bitcoin factory near Reykjavik. At the heart of Iceland’s lava fields stands one of the world’s largest bitcoin factories at a secret location rich in renewable energy, which runs the computers.

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