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America’s bitcoin miners have Georgia on their minds

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When bitcoin miner CleanSpark Inc. bought a data center in the Atlanta suburb of College Park, the company had a problem: It wanted to switch to a cheaper, greener power provider but Georgia law wouldnтАЩt let them. Enter the head of the stateтАЩs power board, who stepped in last year and approved a plan under which the old data center would continue buying power from a big utility, while 15,000 mining machines on the same piece of land would be allowed to buy cleaner power sold by a nonprofit generation organization at about half the price.

тАЬAt the end of the day, Georgia wants this business here,тАЭ Matt Schultz, CleanSparkтАЩs executive chairman, said in an interview. тАЬTheyтАЩve done everything in their power to grow bitcoin in the state.тАЭ

The U.S. has become the worldтАЩs top destination for crypto miners after China banned the energy-intensive industry and as Russia considers doing the same. Now hundreds of thousands of mining machines worth billions of dollars are plugging into electrical grids across America, spawning an entirely new industry тАФ complete with new tax revenue for local governments and big profits for many miners as well as concerns about power use and environmental impact. Some states are working to attract miners while others have taken a more cautious approach, or even pulled up the welcome mat entirely.

Among states that are welcoming the business, Georgia has emerged as a go-to for miners, according to Foundry, a cryptocurrency company that also operates Foundry USA, the worldтАЩs biggest mining pool. Miners in the state were responsible for more than 34% of the computing power in the pool as of Jan. 31, almost double its share since last yearтАЩs third quarter.

Georgia is attracting miners with its relatively low power prices and large amount of nuclear and solar power, which allows mining companies to brand themselves as sustainable or emissions-free. Regulators in the state have also built a reputation for being friendly to miners, guiding miners toward a solar program that allows companies to offset their emissions with renewable energy credits, and giving them access to day-ahead power prices so miners have enough time to throttle back their operations when rates are set to spike. All of this helps explain why a consortium of crypto companies including Bitmain Technologies Ltd. said in September they were bringing another 56,000 miners to the state.

Other states with the largest mining operations in FoundryтАЩs pool are Kentucky with more than 12%, followed by New York, Texas, Nebraska and North Carolina. Foundry has about 17% of bitcoinтАЩs global computing power, so its figures donтАЩt represent all U.S. miners. For example, some big Texas miners arenтАЩt in the Foundry pool so the numbers understate that stateтАЩs share. Still, the data does provide a partial view of where miners are flocking тАФ or where theyтАЩre avoiding, as the case may be: New York state has seen its share fall from about 20% to under 10% in the same period.

Bitcoin miners are made up of thousands of computers that run complex calculations to maintain the cryptocurrencyтАЩs network, with successful miners rewarded in the valuable and volatile virtual currency. Nobody actually goes underground and no metals are тАЬminedтАЭ in the traditional sense. ThereтАЩs also a difference between the financial and professional services that support bitcoin, which politicians like New York City Mayor Eric Adams are eager to attract, and actual mining, which require big data centers and consume large amounts of electricity.

Some states are pushing to attract miners with tax incentives. Kentucky passed a law last year that waives taxes on energy purchases by mining companies, while Wyoming exempted from taxes any natural gas used to power mobile mining rigs. In 2021 alone, a total of 33 states had bills supporting their cryptocurrency infrastructures and 17 enacted new laws, according to Heather Morton, a tax policy analyst at the National Conference of State Legislatures.

New York, meanwhile, has had a hot-and-cold relationship with its miners. While the state has cheap and green hydro power and dormant industrial sites make good mining locations, lawmakers are pushing a bill that would ban mining for three years, and two towns near the Canadian border temporarily outlawed any mines. The private equity-backed Greenidge Generation Holdings Inc. is waiting to see if the pollution permits that allow it to operate will be renewed, but the head of the state agency charged with the renewal gave some indication of his views with a tweet in September that read, тАЬGreenidge has not shown compliance with NYтАЩs climate law.тАЭ

Foundry invested $400 million in the U.S. last year but New YorkтАЩs discouraging tone towards miners meant that only 10% of that spending was there, said Kyle Schneps, the companyтАЩs director of public policy. тАЬNew York is not expanding as quickly because thereтАЩs political and regulatory ambiguity there,тАЭ he said. тАЬMiners are concerned about that and the possibility of a moratorium.тАЭ

Regulations that vary by state sometimes spark miners to move their operations. Sergii Gerasymovych was excited when his crypto company sold a big mining rig to an oil and gas operator with plans to mine bitcoin in New Mexico. But when the company started to install the mobile rig, which burns natural gas that would otherwise be flared to power about 700 miners, they learned that New Mexico strictly regulated generators like the one in the mining rig.

So the company instead trucked the rig to Texas in 2020 and set it up there instead, said Gerasymovych, the chief executive of EZ Blockchain. (New Mexico currently has no presence in the Foundry USA mining pool, while Texas is the fourth-largest.) тАЬOn the one side of the border you can use flaring to mine bitcoin and be praised,тАЭ he said. тАЬOn the other side of the border youтАЩre called evil because youтАЩre sending emissions into the air.тАЭ

Core Scientific is one of the biggest miners in the U.S. with operations in Georgia, North Carolina, Kentucky and North Dakota; it is developing another mine in Texas. Darin Feinstein cofounded the company in 2017 and looked at hundreds of sites to find the companyтАЩs first location in Marble, North Carolina, which was located in a former factory for LeviтАЩs jeans that took advantage of cheap hydropower.

Feinstein said that while he once operated miners in Washington state, heтАЩs since turned down dozens of deals both there and in New York because of the unfriendly approach to mining from local politicians and utilities. тАЬListen, weтАЩre not moving into vicinities that donтАЩt want us, hard stop,тАЭ Feinstein said. тАЬWeтАЩre not going to New York, weтАЩre not going to areas that donтАЩt want this industry within their borders.тАЭ

Tricia Pridemore heads the Georgia Public Service Commission, which oversees electric companies and power prices in the state, and is the regulator who stepped in to make sure CleanSpark could switch to the power provider it wanted. тАЬI donтАЩt necessarily have an opinion on bitcoin mining,тАЭ she said in an interview. She sees her role as talking with miners to tell them what they should know and giving them some ways to accomplish their goals. тАЬIf they consume a lot of energy and we work with the utilities, then theyтАЩre a great fit for Georgia.тАЭ

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