Texas Crypto Miners Shuttering Operations as Winter Storm Approaches

Riot Blockchain is among the companies on storm watch and looking to help protect the state’s power grid.

AccessTimeIconFeb 3, 2022 at 3:08 a.m. UTC
Updated May 11, 2023 at 7:16 p.m. UTC
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A number of crypto miners in Texas are already shutting down some or all their operations as the region awaits an Arctic blast that is likely to test the state’s power grid this week.

The miners, many of whom flocked to the state in recent months to take advantage of Texas’s low energy costs, say they will reduce their energy consumption to help avoid a power failure similar to the one Texas experienced in 2021. That outage left about 4.5 million homes and businesses without power and led to nearly $200 billion in property damage.

These efforts will dovetail with those of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), which operates the Texas grid and said on Wednesday that it would use “all tools to manage the grid.” Some of the miners will also be taking advantage of state incentives to ratchet back their power usage.

Riot Blockchain, one of the biggest North American miners, has already reduced its energy usage at its Whinstone facility in Rockdale by 98$%-99%, Trystine Payfer, Riot’s director of communications, told CoinDesk. “We will continue to do so as needed until there is no extreme stress on the ERCOT grid,” she added.

Compute North, which hosts bitcoin miners in its data centers, told CoinDesk that it is also closely eyeing the storm. “We are prepared to respond [in] real time to curtail our operations in order to support ERCOT, grid stability and power demand,” Compute North Director of Energy Peter Liska said.

Nathan Nichols, the co-founder and CEO of Texas-based miner Rhodium, tweeted that miners in the state were “curtailing their load starting TODAY to help provide excess power reserves for #WinterStormLandon.”

To be sure, in Texas there are programs available for heavy power consumers such as crypto miners to give them incentives to lower their energy usage during peak demand periods. For example, in exchange for helping ERCOT stabilize the grid, Riot gets to participate in load management programs and other services, including some long-term, lower, fixed-pricing agreements, Payfer said.

Compute North’s Liska said that demand response programs, which allow customers to reduce their electricity usage when energy prices are high, are one way for the company to balance power generation and consumption during peak demand.

“Rather than incremental energy production, we reduce our load giving power back to the grid, which is more cost effective and efficient than spinning up additional energy reserves,” Liska added.

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Aoyon Ashraf

Aoyon Ashraf is managing editor with more than a decade of experience in covering equity markets


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