New York Post

Bitcoin ‘eruption’

El Salvador taps volcano power to mine crypto

- By LYDIA MOYNIHAN

Bitcoin is red-hot in El Salvador — and the country says it plans to use power from its volcanoes tomineit.

El Salvador President Nayib Bukele — just hours after the country’s legislatur­e approved the “Bitcoin Law,” making it the first to accept Bitcoin as legal tender — revealed Wednesday that the nation’s stateowned geothermal electric company will harness volcanic energy to mine the cryptocurr­ency.

Bukele said the country is already designing a mining hub that will use “very cheap, 100 percent clean, 100 percent renewable” energy from volcanoes to power the operation, which effectivel­y would be a bank of superpower­ed computers that solve the complex mathematic­al equations required to mine Bitcoin.

“Our engineers just informed me that they dug a new well... from our volcanos. Starting to design a full #Bitcoin mining hub around it.”

— El Salvador President Nayib Bukele

“Our engineers just informed me that they dug a new well,” Bukele tweeted, saying it would generate 95 megawatts of energy — enough to power more than 500 homes for a year. “What you see coming out of the well is pure water vapor.”

Bukele — who is looking to lower transactio­n fees on the $6 billion in yearly remittance­s sent to El Salvador’s citizens from abroad — has yet, however, to reveal when the new operation will be live or how many bitcoins he expects to be able to mine.

It’s been a bullish week for Bitcoin in El Salvador. The digital coin can now be used as payment for goods, services and taxes in the public and private sector. Bitcoin rose 6 percent on the news, according to data from Coindesk.

According to a study by Cambridge University, Bitcoin mining consumes more energy per year than the Philippine­s. Elon Musk has met with Bitcoin miners about environmen­tal concerns, recently citing them as he announced Tesla would no longer accept Bitcoin as payment.

Details about the mining efforts and how El Salvador will widely adopt Bitcoin remain vague. The law states it will provide “the necessary training and mechanisms” to allow the 70 percent of its citizens that don’t have access to traditiona­l banking services to understand how they can use Bitcoin but didn’t elaborate.

Still, Bukele remains an enthusiast­ic advocate for the currency.

 ??  ?? All ‘mine’ . . . but don’t get burned!
Now that Bitcoin is recognized in El Salvador as legal currency, the government is allocating geothermal electricit­y to create the crypto.
All ‘mine’ . . . but don’t get burned! Now that Bitcoin is recognized in El Salvador as legal currency, the government is allocating geothermal electricit­y to create the crypto.

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