Fueled by “stranded” natural gas, the startup hopes to become the largest in the US, and to make Alaska an industry center.

A proposed bitcoin mine in Alaska would use natural has to produce as much energy as is produced by the state’s largest coal plant, reports Nathaniel Herz in the Alaska Beacon.
The startup planning the project, Stax Capital Partners, “recently applied for a permit with state land managers to set up shipping container-like pods housing natural gas generators and computers at a site some 30 miles south of the massive Prudhoe Bay oil field. The generators would be fueled by the basin’s huge stores of ‘stranded’ natural gas — an industry term for gas that doesn’t have a pipeline connecting it to potential customers.”
Alaska officials have been positioning the state as ideal for Bitcoin operations, which require massive amounts of energy. “But developing new industries in the region is challenging due to its remote location and steep construction costs. And oil companies on the North Slope haven’t ever sold large quantities of gas for Alaska-based data centers or Bitcoin mining, so it’s not yet known whether their asking price would be low enough to offset the higher costs of building and operating infrastructure in the Arctic.”
Phil Wight, an energy historian at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, warns that the project could add to the industrialization of the fragile region and increase carbon emissions.
FULL STORY: New Alaska Bitcoin mine would use as much power as the state’s largest coal plant produces

Planetizen Federal Action Tracker
A weekly monitor of how Trump’s orders and actions are impacting planners and planning in America.

Silicon Valley ‘Bike Superhighway’ Awarded $14M State Grant
A Caltrans grant brings the 10-mile Central Bikeway project connecting Santa Clara and East San Jose closer to fruition.

Amtrak Cutting Jobs, Funding to High-Speed Rail
The agency plans to cut 10 percent of its workforce and has confirmed it will not fund new high-speed rail projects.

California Set to Increase Electric Truck Chargers by 25%
The California Transportation Commission approved funding for an additional 500 charging ports for electric trucks along some of the state’s busiest freight corridors.

21 Climate Resilience Projects Cancelled by the EPA
The federal government has pulled funding for at least 21 projects related to farming, food systems, and environmental justice to comply with one of Trump’s early executive orders.

Trump Executive Order on Homelessness Calls for Forced Institutionalization
The order seeks to remove legal precedents and consent decrees that prevent cities from moving unhoused people from the street to treatment centers.
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