Andrew Richardson’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Leveraging intra-provincial regulatory differences in a post-Paris context: Cryptocurrency mining "reverse battery" strategy in Atlantic Canada
  • Article
  • Full-text available

March 2024

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49 Reads

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5 Citations

The Extractive Industries and Society

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Heather Millar

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Andrew Richardson

Cheap and abundant energy is an important incentive for the proliferation of cryptocurrency mining farms. With China's crackdown on bitcoin mining, investors have moved to the United States, Scandinavian countries, and Canada. From the perspective of business, these jurisdictions provide cheap, reliable electricity within a stable institutional context. At the same time, cryptocurrency mining has the potential to generate instability, not only through material demands on the capacity of the electricity grid, but also in jeopardizing governments' climate goals. This article examines some strategies used by the industry to seek out favorable regulatory environments and take advantage of energy sources and infrastructures, through the case of HIVE blockchain technology, a mining company in Atlantic Canada. The article explains how in contrast with negative reports of marginal employment opportunities and drains on domestic energy supplies, bitcoin miners are developing new narratives to make cryptocurrency mining investment attractive to governments and the public. We find that HIVE has leveraged intra-provincial regulatory differences to expand operations and is currently using a "reverse battery" narrative to improve regulatory and public acceptance of cryptocurrency mining.

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Citations (1)


... 7 While typical company headquarters can have between 200 and 1000 jobs on site, the number of jobs at a typical energy-intensive data centre is usually between 5 and 30 (Lenio, 2015). Similarly, in New Brunswick, Canada the country's largest bitcoin mining facility was built near the border with Québec with the goal of bypassing a moratorium imposed by Québec's government, while taking advantage of its electricity, which New Brunswick buys (Rosales et al., 2024;Atkins et al., 2021). New Brunswick's Miners have directly created only 19 jobs, while extracting between 50 and 80 MW of electricity (Rosales et al., 2024). ...

Reference:

Crypto/Space: Computational parasitism, virtual land grabs, and the production of Web3 Exit zones
Leveraging intra-provincial regulatory differences in a post-Paris context: Cryptocurrency mining "reverse battery" strategy in Atlantic Canada

The Extractive Industries and Society