Block, Blockstream and Tesla partner up to create eco-friendly mining farm powered by the sun
Mining companies Block and Blockstream are setting up a joint mining facility and are using Tesla's solar energy storage facility Megapacks for power.
Block and Blockstream are setting up a green Bitcoin (BTC) mining station in Texas, powered by Elon Musk‘s sustainable solar battery megapacks produced by Tesla Inc.
Both Blockstream and Block — which is led by Jack Dorsey — invested $6 million each to fund the operation. However, Blockstream alone is overseeing the overall project and providing the mining infrastructure. It also raised around $40 million for the project through a token traded on Bitfinex.
Blockstream CEO Adam Back commented on this initiative and said:
“This is a step to proving our thesis that Bitcoin mining can fund zero-emission power infrastructure and build economic growth for the future.”
The station is currently in the building stage and is expected to finish by the end of 2022.
Megapacks
The first four megapacks have already arrived at the mining site, according to Blockstream’s Twitter account.
Megapacks have landed, repeat the Megapacks have landed!
The @Blockstream, @blocks and @Tesla 100% renewable zero-emission #BitcoinMining facility is just getting started. #Bitcoin pic.twitter.com/5hMj6F8yT4
— Blockstream (@Blockstream) May 18, 2022
Megapacks are manufactured by Tesla and behave like giant batteries by storing solar power. They’re not widely popular yet as they are not ready for general public use. The mining station in Texas will be the first one to use Megapacks as an energy source.
In total, Tesla will provide a 3.8-megawatt solar farm to produce energy and a 12-megawatt-hour megapack system to store it. This combination is enough to run 30 petahashes per second worth of computing power using only solar power.
The four megapacks that have arrived are enough to store nearly 5.2-megawatt-hours of energy and cost roughly $6 million.
Tesla supports green mining
In June 2021, Bitcoin prices spiked a while when Elon Musk said the company will accept Bitcoin payments for Tesla cars.
However, Musk changed his mind quickly due to the concerning ecological impact of Bitcoin mining. He tweeted:
This is inaccurate. Tesla only sold ~10% of holdings to confirm BTC could be liquidated easily without moving market.
When there’s confirmation of reasonable (~50%) clean energy usage by miners with positive future trend, Tesla will resume allowing Bitcoin transactions.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) June 13, 2021
A report from Bitcoin Mining Council recently confirmed that 58.4% of Bitcoin mining is done via sustainable energy as of the first quarter. The use of renewable energy in mining has increased by about 59% on an annual basis between the first quarter of 2022 and the first quarter of 2021.
However, Musk did not publicly acknowledge these results or retrieved his decision to stop accepting Bitcoin payments for Tesla cars.
Tesla purchased $1.5 billion worth of BTC last February and sold $272 million worth of BTC the following month to provide liquidity. According to Tesla’s last quarterly report, it has $1.26 billion invested in digital assets.