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INSIGHT-Low-carbon bitcoin? Crypto miners' green power talk angers Texas locals

In This Article:

* Bitcoin companies in Texas venture into renewable energy deals

* Cryptocurrency firms still using mainly dirty power, experts say

* Residents mobilize against crypto projects in their backyard

By Avi Asher -Schapiro

CORSICANA, Texas, Sept 6 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - As temperatures crept above 100 degrees Fahrenheit (37.8C) on a July day, air-conditioners across Texas churned overtime and demand on the U.S. state's electricity grid flirted with a new demand record: 80 gigawatts (GW), nearly double the daily average.

But at a recently set-up bitcoin mine in West Texas, the computers were turned off, with only a trickle of power flowing to keep the lights on and the air cool.

As electricity prices hit $5,000 per megawatt hour on a hot day, it was no longer profitable to run the machines that compete to verify blocks of data and win new bitcoins, with the energy costs outstripping the value of the cryptocurrency produced during those expensive midday hours.

“What we need here is more renewables,” said Michael McNamara, CEO and co-founder of Lancium, the bitcoin mining tech company that manages the small facility.

His company aims to support just that, as part of a broader push that could help boost and green the power supply of Texas - which today gets nearly two-thirds of its electricity from fossil fuels - and potentially help shift energy-hungry bitcoin's image as a barrier to climate action.

In this windswept rural community, on the site of a dance hall where legendary Tejano singer Selena used to perform, Lancium is expanding its pilot crypto mining facility, fitted with a software system to manage the electricity that feeds it.

The operation will eventually draw more than 300 megawatts (MW) - enough to power about 60,000 homes - from increasingly plentiful wind and solar resources being built in Texas.

Under its plan to construct a "green campus" on the site, Lancium will rent out space to other companies to locate their mining machines, with all the equipment capable of being turned off quickly when power prices rise and energy is needed elsewhere in the grid.

Bitcoin proponents like McNamara say this feature will make Texas' grid more resilient - and turn their industry into a crucial, if unlikely, ally in the climate change fight and efforts to shift Texas toward a cleaner energy mix.

Many energy transition experts remain unconvinced.

Jesse Jenkins, an assistant professor at Princeton University who leads a lab focused on optimizing zero-carbon energy systems, said bitcoin miners are more likely to boost demand for fossil-fuel power.