Welcome to Discussion Bucks

Earn Cash While You Engage!

Join the ultimate paid-to-post forum where your opinions earn you real cash! 🌟 💵 Earn While You Post: Share your thoughts and watch your earnings grow. 🌐 Global Community: Connect with members worldwide. 🎁 Exclusive Perks: Enjoy rewards and VIP perks. Get Started in Minutes!

SignUp Now!
  • Welcome to our community! 🌟 Don't miss out on the latest Events and Paid Offers available exclusively in our Community Events & Paid Offers Section. Dive in now to explore and benefit! 💼
    💰 Paid Offers Available! — We have 1 running!💰

Iceland's PM Puts Cold Shoulder To Crypto Expansion In Country

Joined
Sep 29, 2023
Messages
863
Reaction score
132
Trophy Points
4
Location
Morganton, NC
D Bucks
💵2.669600
Referral Credit
0
Global Connector Emblem NFT [Common]
The Block: Iceland's PM gives cold shoulder to crypto as miners search worldwide for cheap electricity
Iceland's vast network of hydroelectric and geothermal plants have made the island nation the world's largest energy producer per capita. A robust crypto mining industry has also made it the world's foremost Bitcoin hashrate producer by the same metric. Yet when Prime Minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir looks to the future, she prefers to picture corn over crypto mining.

Jakobsdóttir, speaking to the Financial Times, outlined a goal of increased food production for the country alongside a transfer of renewable energy away from the crypto mining industry and towards's Iceland's households and other industries. “Bitcoin is an issue worldwide . . . but data centres in Iceland use a significant share of our green energy,” she reportedly said.

The price of Iceland's 100% renewable electricity is insulated from fluctuations in global fuel prices, making the country an attractive destination for crypto miners. However, with electricity growing scarcer under high demand and with few new power plants under construction, the crypto mining industry is not expected to grow in the country, according to research firm Luxor.

The Prime Minister, who once coincidentally took the same flight as a man suspected of stealing $2 million in crypto miners from around the country before fleeing to Sweden, said her focus on agriculture comes from a desire to rely less on imported food.

Bitcoin's upcoming block reward halving, now less than a month away, has nonetheless spurred new worldwide demand for last generation crypto miners owned by U.S.-based companies, according to a recent report from Bloomberg.

Those machines, such as some 600,000 Bitmain Antminer s19 series miners which cost up to $11,500 each at their peak, are on their way out of the U.S. and headed towards growing mining operations in Africa and South America where energy is cheaper, the report states. After the halving, each machine is estimated to fetch only around $350.

While China and Iceland were two of the first countries with significant crypto mining industries, this next wave is seeing more development in South America and Africa. Chinese miners are targeting Ethiopia in particular, drawn by the low energy costs though wary of the area's political instability.
 
Well, Iceland has decided to completely shake up the game. Their PM no longer wants crypto, he says food is better than Bitcoin machines. They want clean electricity to go to homes and factories, not just for miners. Now the story is that miners are running around looking for cheap electricity. Africa and South America are selling old machines at throwaway prices. Ethiopia has been a target but it's not easy because of their politics. Iceland says the future is corn, not mining.
 
Iceland don't understand that crypto is the next revolution in the financial sector. They would have regulated it.
Europe in general is still very resistant to Blockchain technology; there’s nothing that can be done for now except wait for them to realize their mistake.
Agreed.
 
Back
Top Bottom