Canada's Hydro Quebec unable to meet demand from digital currency miners

Reuters  |  MONTREAL 

By Allison Lampert

MONTREAL (Reuters) - Canada's largest utility, Hydro Quebec, is reviewing its commercial strategy after being inundated with demand from global miners rushing to the province to benefit from political stability and prices.

will not have the long-term capacity to meet all the anticipated demand, a company said, after the utility's more than doubled in a week to 70.

mining consumes large quantities of because it uses computers to solve complex math puzzles to validate transactions in the cryptocurrency, which are written to the blockchain, or digital ledger.

The to solve the problem is rewarded in and the transaction is added to the blockchain.

Expectations of a crackdown in China, one of the world's biggest sources of cryptocurrency mining, on the sector has made energy-rich an for companies, and its is now receiving queries on his profile.

Bitmain Technologies, operator of some of the largest mining farms in China, is among the companies searching for sites in Others include Japan's <9449. T>, but it has not yet taken a decision on whether to start operations in the province, a source familiar with the matter said.

A GMO declined to comment.

"We are receiving dozens of demands each day. This context is prompting us to clearly define our strategy," said by phone.

"We won't be able to power all the projects that we're receiving," he said, while stressing that is not automatically refusing entrepreneurs. "This is evolving very rapidly so we have to be prudent."

Hydro is also keen on attracting data centres, which generate more employment than mines.

According to Hydro Quebec, the province estimates it will have an surplus equivalent to 100 terawatt hours over the next 10 years. One terawatt hour powers 60,000 homes in during a year.

A shortage of sites in with the necessary electric capacity has prompted several entrepreneurs to break down their projects into smaller investments, said Laurent Feral-Pierssens, executive director, at

"This is the tip of the iceberg, as only a fraction of the initiatives have reached out to yet," said Feral-Pierssens, who works with miners that want to open operations in the province.

(Reporting By Allison Lampert; Additional reporting by in Tokyo; Editing by and Susan Thomas)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, January 20 2018. 03:42 IST