Toronto Star

Bitcoin firm bets the farm in Quebec

Cheap hydro attracted Bitfarms, but there have been some growing pains

- GIUSEPPE VALIANTE

MONTREAL— Bitfarms marketed itself last spring as a socially conscious company, harnessing unused, sustainabl­e hydroelect­ricity to help power Quebec’s digital economy while also providing much-needed revenue for the province’s struggling regions.

But since that time, the cryptocurr­ency mining firm has run into difficulti­es.

Bitfarms lost its president and co-founder last month, along with three managers and other lower-level staff. Its stock price is trading roughly 30 per cent lower than when it was first listed on the TSXV exchange in July. And residents living near the company’s operations in Sherbrooke, Que., say the noise emanating from its operations is intolerabl­e.

Bitfarms executives say they are not worried, explaining the recent departures as nothing more than growing pains. The company says it’s confident investors will come around to its stock’s true value. And as for the noise, Bitfarms says the 23-metre wall it has proposed to build outside its Sherbrooke factory will help restore peace and quiet to the neighbourh­ood.

But residents along the Magog River aren’t so sure. Marcel Cyr, who lives across the river from Bitfarms, said people in the neighbourh­ood have complained about the noise and vibrations coming from the factory. But since then, the company has only increased its capacity and announced a further expansion.

“They say they are acting in good faith,” Cyr said of Bitfarms in a recent phone interview. “And in the beginning, we believed them. But we no longer believe them. How can we?”

Bitfarms was until recently seen in Quebec as a nascent Bitcoin giant, led by millionair­e cofounder Pierre-Luc Quimper, who started his first IT company at 14 years old. Bitfarms has invested roughly $80 million in the province since it began operating in 2017.

It currently runs five cryptocurr­ency mining centres across the province, which are essentiall­y large spaces hosting thousands of small computers designed to “hash,” meaning they conduct trillions of attempts per second to solve a complex math problem.

The first computer to solve the problem — in competitio­n with similar machines around the world — is awarded bitcoin currency, which is Bitfarms’ main revenue source. Each Bitcoin is currently worth about $11,000.

Bitfarms’ computers generally run 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and consume massive amounts of energy. It’s that appetite for energy that has attracted Bitfarms and similar companies to set up shop in Quebec and take advantage of comparativ­ely cheap and abundant hydroelect­ricity.

The deal between Sherbrooke and Bitfarms secured the company 98 megawatts. Sherbrooke officials say the city stands to receive $3 million a year from Bitfarms’ use of electricit­y.

But while Sherbrooke welcomed the money, some residents are fuming. The machines consume so much power that large ventilator­s are needed to keep the factories cool so they don’t overheat. And those massive fans operating night and day are driving people like Cyr crazy.

Marc Denault, a Sherbrooke councillor, said had the city known about the noise problem, it wouldn’t have let the company move into the abandoned hockey-stick factory. “And I’m convinced Bitfarms wouldn’t have chosen that area either,” he said in an interview.

Cyr said he and many other residents want Bitfarms to stop mining for currency until it can find a solution. “The noise destroys the environmen­t, destroys people’s health because of the stress,” he said.

Back in May, Quimper, the company’s co-founder, exuded optimism. “Everything is in front of us,” he told The Canadian Press. But in October he quit, along with vice-presidents Anthony Lévesque and Louis Valois, and the head of public relations, Bahador Zabihiyan.

A source with knowledge of Bitfarms’ operations, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they feared repercussi­ons from the company, talked of tension between the Toronto and Quebec sides of the firm. “The operations and revenues are in Quebec,” the source said, “the corporate offices are in Toronto.”

Wes Fulford, Bitfarms’ Toronto-based CEO, said any talk of conflict between Toronto and Quebec is just “business gossip.” But his descriptio­n of Quimper’s departure suggested a clash of personalit­ies.

“He’s never had a boss. He’s never had a board of directors,” Fulford said of his former business partner, Quimper. “He’s been involved in growing small companies. We are now a much larger, profession­ally traded organizati­on, and you can read into that what you like.”

Quimper, in an emailed statement to The Canadian Press, said: “We built up that great infrastruc­ture together with the three other founders. We hired Wes to help implement our vision. At some point, my vision as an entreprene­ur and businessma­n was different from Wes’ vision, who has a traditiona­l banking background.”

Back in Sherbrooke, Denault, the councillor, said Bitfarms has shown a willingnes­s to address the noise problem. Fulford said the company will renovate inside the factory and build a wall outside to help muffle the sound from ventilator­s.

 ?? LARS HAGBERG AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Technician­s inspect the bitcoin mining operation at Bitfarms in St-Hyacinthe, Que., in 2018.
LARS HAGBERG AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Technician­s inspect the bitcoin mining operation at Bitfarms in St-Hyacinthe, Que., in 2018.

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