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Earth Bitcoin Canada Power

Bitcoin-Mining Power Plant Secretly Launched in Alberta, Tapping Dormant Gas Well (www.cbc.ca) 62

"When residents of an affluent estate community in Alberta started hearing noise from a nearby power plant, they didn't expect their complaints of sleepless nights would lead to a months-long investigation that would find a bitcoin mining operation had set up shop without approval," reports the CBC: Now, Link Global, the company behind the site, is being ordered by the province's utility commission to shut down two plants until it can prove it's allowed to operate — a move the company says will cost jobs and cause the oil and gas infrastructure in which it operates to sit dormant....

Vancouver-based Link Global had set up four 1.25 MW gas generators at the site, pulling power from a dormant natural gas well owned by Calgary-based company MAGA Energy. The natural gas powers thousands of computer servers that run programs to "mine" digital currency... Work on the plant began in August 2020, and by fall — when neighbours started to get annoyed — it was operating at full capacity. There was just one problem: The company hadn't notified neighbours of its plans. Or the county. Or the provincial utilities commission — which allows power plants to be set up without approval if they meet several conditions, including only generating power for the company's own use and proving the plant has no adverse effects on people or the environment...

Alberta is littered with nearly 200,000 dormant or abandoned oil and gas wells, often because they're no longer economically viable. It has raised the spectre that landowners and taxpayers could be on the hook for the cleanup costs, which the province estimates could be up to $30 billion, as well as prompted a push to find other uses for the facilities, such as powering cryptocurrency operations. Stephen Jenkins, Link Global's CEO, said some of that abandoned energy infrastructure, is at risk of leaking methane — a greenhouse gas more potent than carbon dioxide. "We look at, OK, what can we do to use this in a beneficial way ... I don't want to say we're in the business of methane destruction, but we're in the business of beneficial use of that potential methane-generating source. You combust it properly. You don't flare it, and you control those emissions," Jenkins said...

And though the facility employs only four people, Jenkins said it's important to him to employ locally and give former oil and gas workers a path into other careers. The Sturgeon County plant's supervisor is a former pipefitter; he's now a bitcoin pro and an expert at keeping the plant online, Jenkins said. "It's a perfect use of people's skills," he said.

Of course, it's not all altruism. The company has said for every 10 MW of power, it can generate about 1.2 bitcoins per day.

Last Friday the Alberta Utilities Commission (AUC) ruled that the plant had indeed been violating their regulatory requirements, and would now also have to suffer a financial penalty which the CBC reported as "a $50,000 to $75,000 fine, reduced by up to 50% because Link Global admitted to breaking the rules..."

"More penalties could be on the way. The AUC will now review whether specific sanctions should be imposed against Link Global for operating without approval — a decision on that is expected this fall."

The CBC adds that another Link Global plant was also found to be "set up without the AUC's prior approval."
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Bitcoin-Mining Power Plant Secretly Launched in Alberta, Tapping Dormant Gas Well

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  • Absolute insanity (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Saturday August 28, 2021 @01:52PM (#61739125) Journal
    This cryptocurrency shit needs to be outlawed. Wastes resources, creates pollution, encourages crime. The only thing more stupid and useless is this 'NFT' shit.
    • Re: (Score:1, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Someone needs to read TFA...

      Stephen Jenkins, Link Global's CEO, said some of that abandoned energy infrastructure, is at risk of leaking methane -- a greenhouse gas more potent than carbon dioxide. "We look at, OK, what can we do to use this in a beneficial way ... I don't want to say we're in the business of methane destruction, but we're in the business of beneficial use of that potential methane-generating source. You combust it properly. You don't flare it, and you control those emissions," Jenkins said...

      These guys are fighting climate change by combusting methane gas. That's a good thing.

      Where they've gone wrong: apparently made too much noise and haven't paid off the local government sufficiently enough.

      • by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Saturday August 28, 2021 @02:15PM (#61739211)
        Yep, and their shady operation is absolutely not going to have any methane leaks of its own. Totally inconceivable.

        but we're in the business of beneficial use of that potential methane-generating source. You combust it properly.

        Natural gas power plants already do that, except the electricity thus generated is then consumed in much more useful ways, so there's that.

        • their shady operation is absolutely not going to have any methane leaks of its own. Totally inconceivable.

          With a name like MAGA Energy, you know they're guilty.

      • As it stands there was nothing illegal per se about what they were doing except that they didn't do the normal things that any business has to do. Licensing, zoning, permits, approvals. Also I think they have to track resource usage to pay royalties but that is probably the responsibility of Maga, the well owner.

        They would have been alright if they had better silencing on the power plants.

        The whole thing is a modular, turn key operation, and is designed to be replicated at a minimal cost. About four to

        • Re:Absolute insanity (Score:4, Informative)

          by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Saturday August 28, 2021 @04:41PM (#61739619)

          A total money generator.

          Let's do the math:

          From TFA: 10 MW = 1.2 bitcoins per day

          10 MW * 24 hours = 240,000 kWh.

          The wholesale price of electricity in Alberta is about 5 cents. So that is 240,000 * 0.05 = $12,000.

          1.2 bitcoins at today's market price of $49k = $59k

          So they are using $12k of power to create $59k of bitcoins for a profit of $47k per day.

          Yup. Definitely looks like a money-spinner.

          Of course, they have to pay for their ASIC mining rigs, but that's a sunk cost.

          • They aren't paying 5c; they aren't on the grid. They brought in four 1.5 MW gas generators.

            We don't know what Maga is charging them for the gas from the dormant well. We also don't know if there is a requirement to measure gas production and pay the province royalties for gas produced.

            Maga might be getting a percentage of bitcoin produced in which case power cost is virtually zero, you just have a business partner who splits the profit in some manner.

            Various support expenses are going to eat into the pro

          • There is also a levy aka Carbon Tax that gets applied to the consumption of natural gas.
          • The ASIC mining rigs have to be refreshed every year or so. You can't just hand wave away the cost.

        • Says the cryptocurrency miner/posessor. Bug off.
        • And once we apply the Carbon Tax those bitcoins are now underwater.
      • by Local ID10T ( 790134 ) <ID10T.L.USER@gmail.com> on Saturday August 28, 2021 @03:06PM (#61739367) Homepage

        These guys are fighting climate change by combusting methane gas. That's a good thing.

        No.

        That is only true if you assume the alternative to combusting methane gas is releasing it into the atmosphere. The best alternative is to leave it in the ground.

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        So other than ignoring all requirements to operate in the area and keeping everyone within 10 km (314 km^2) awake at night every night, it was all cool?

      • These guys are fighting climate change by combusting methane gas. That's a good thing.

        Not as good as leaving it buried deep in the ground where it was.

      • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

        You know what would fight climate change even better? Properly capping the abandoned well so it doesn't leak any methane. I guess there isn't enough profit in doing that though.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by slazzy ( 864185 )
      Personally I think cryptocurrency is very useful. I look forward to the day when it's not using as much energy and the speculation madness comes to an end and it's just a useful store of wealth and payment method.
      • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Saturday August 28, 2021 @04:57PM (#61739665)

        Personally I think cryptocurrency is very useful.

        For what? Changing value unpredictably? Providing an easy way for a hacker to empty your bank account? Free you from those pesky consumer protection regulations the gubbmit forces on your bank? Maybe it's the complexity you like, or the insanely slow transaction processing time? Or maybe you just trust some fly by night hackers more than people who follow strict laws?

        Which of these traits do you find useful? It's certainly not useful to pay for things... which is a somewhat important feature for a currency.

        • Wastes resources, creates pollution, encourages crime.
        • It's great for traveling to foreign countries that aren't well connected to the U.S. banking regime. Pulling your money out of Wells Fargo bank in East Africa is like pulling teeth. Finding someone to exchange local currency for Bitcoin is straightforward.

    • If you want to save the environment, sell Bitcoin. Buy a different currency that does not require oodles of energy.

    • Bitcoin is a very useful currency and fiat currency is far more corrupt and wasteful than Bitcoin
  • by Puls4r ( 724907 ) on Saturday August 28, 2021 @01:55PM (#61739135)
    So if I admit to speeding, will they half or quarter the ticket I'm going to get because I admitted to it? And that's JUST for speeding.

    Yet if I want to exploit natural resources for literally NO REASON and pollute the planet, and do all that illegal, piss off all the neighbors and everyone around, break numerous laws.... I can get $30 or $40,000 knocked off the fine if I "admit" it?

    Way to go Canada.
  • Is Link Global paying MAGA Energy for use of their property? Is Link Global pulling the required permits? Is Link Global working within the law? Should they be allowed to continue being a parasite?

    NO.

    Treat them as they are, thieves.
  • Just 2 or 3 should cover it.

  • by harvey the nerd ( 582806 ) on Saturday August 28, 2021 @03:36PM (#61739447)
    These guys were probably using temporary field equipment allowances with god knows what kind of (old) equipment scabbed in. Normally you would have siting rules about distance and silencers (mufflers) designed for the location with a promised quietness service level for a permanent installation.

    I can hear it now. Silencer what's that?

    1.2 Bitcoins * $50,000/BC = $60,000/day
    $60,000/120,000 KWh = 50 cent / KWh, wow already huge margins
    figure 40% - 45% genset efficiency
    293 * .4 = 117 KWh / MMBTU
    ~1000 MMBTU/day at $2/day (royalties and minor production expenses, high) = $2000/day
    4 employees x 12.5 hr/day * $40/hr = $2000/day
    amortize four 1250 KW gensets at $800/day each = $3200/day (new, 1 yr, although I suspect they were old scrappers reconditioned)
    $7200/day (high side) + their mining rigs

    These guys were greedy assholes that didn't have a clue to running a pirate operation long term with a little money spent to keep the neighbors happy. We have had an illegal commercial entertainment operation next door (weddings, riotous parties e.g. 1000w speakers and blood curdling screams at 3 am). The guy was a (now former) "IRS" director and could get away with murder because the municipalaty and association were afraid of him. It took us years to quiet his operation down.
  • Seems like the fine is a small cost of doing business. Less than a most marketing budgets.

    $45k/BTC and running 4x1.25MW that's $35k they made today.

    Ha. They can run them as peaker plants, used only when the price of BTC is over a day's fine...

  • I don't know why people buy into this baseless currency. You burn lots and lots of electricity to mine bitcoin. Don't tell me people are using renewable energy because they don't. They just plug in and run their computers. It doesn't make sense.
    • How much does it cost in resources to mint, regulate and secure fiat currency?
    • No one is plugging in their computers and mining Bitcoin. Bitcoin is produced almost entirely by professional large-scale operations using purpose built hardware. One of the most critical components of a successful mining operation is cheap electricity. Renewables are generally becoming cheaper, so we can expect mining to largely move to renewables.

  • by twoallbeefpatties ( 615632 ) on Sunday August 29, 2021 @06:13AM (#61740811)

    When involuntary unemployment exists, the marginal disutility of labour is necessarily less than the utility of the marginal product. Indeed it may be much less. For a man who has been long unemployed some measure of labour, instead of involving disutility, may have a positive utility. If this is accepted, the above reasoning shows how 'wasteful' loan expenditure may nevertheless enrich the community on balance. Pyramid-building, earthquakes, even wars may serve to increase wealth, if the education of our statesmen on the principles of the classical economics stands in the way of anything better.

    It is curious how common sense, wriggling for an escape from absurd conclusions, has been apt to reach a preference for wholly 'wasteful' forms of loan expenditure rather than for partly wasteful forms, which, because they are not wholly wasteful, tend to be judged on strict 'business' principles. For example, unemployment relief financed by loans is more readily accepted than the financing of improvements at a charge below the current rate of interest; whilst the form of digging holes in the ground known as gold-mining, which not only adds nothing whatever to the real wealth of the world but involves the disutility of labour, is the most acceptable of all solutions.

    If the Treasury were to fill old bottles with banknotes, bury them at suitable depths in disused coalmines which are then filled up to the surface with town rubbish, and leave it to private enterprise on well-tried principles of laissez-faire to dig the notes up again (the right to do so being obtained, of course, by tendering for leases of the note-bearing territory), there need be no more unemployment and, with the help of the repercussions, the real income of the community, and its capital wealth also, would probably become a good deal greater than it actually is. It would, indeed, be more sensible to build houses and the like; but if there are political and practical difficulties in the way of this, the above would be better than nothing.

    I'm old enough to remember when libertarians used to talk shit at Keynes for this quote. How dare the government waste money on digging holes just to give people jobs. And now we've got a true self-made entrepreneur demanding his right to spend natural gas on meaningless tokens, because think of the jobs.

    • Keynesian economics hasn't been a useful model since the 80s. Keynes was describing shit as it was in the 30s. The world economy has changed, and Keynes is now considered somewhat obsolete. No one should care what Keynes thinks.

      That said, you're mischaracterizing this miner's claims of "rights". They followed existing law and regulation. They just want a stable business environment where they are on equal footing as everyone else and don't get his with ex post facto regulations that undermine their business

      • The inelasticity of demand at the margins hasn't changed and remains something people need to care about. Demand is an S-curve, not a straight line, one of those key insights that took a surprisingly long time to come about.
  • Or the provincial utilities commission — which allows power plants to be set up without approval if they meet several conditions, including only generating power for the company's own use and proving the plant has no adverse effects on people or the environment...

    So, you don't need regulatory approval to generate your own power, you just need to go to the regulators and have them approve you for unapproved operation?? Is that the result of bad reporting/editing/summarizing, or are the laws just insa

A committee takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom. -- Parkinson

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