Provincial utility Hydro-Quebec has proposed new rules[1], under which blockchain[2] companies will be required to bid for electricity and quantify the jobs and investment they expect to generate per megawatt, Hydro-Quebec announced in a press release[3] June 21.
The new regime seeks to allocate up to 500 megawatts, in addition to 120 megawatts[4] of already existing initiatives. The starting rate is reportedly 1 Canadian[5] cent ($0.0075) per kilowatt hour, which is 20 percent above the industry standard price. The new plan is subject to approval by local energy regulator Regie de l’energie. Hydro-Quebec commented on the new proposal:
“The goal of this process is to both maximize economic spinoffs for Quebec and revenue for Hydro-Quebec – in turn, pushing electricity rates down for customers.”
The latest development follows a series of changes in the Quebec government and power supplier’s policy towards cryptocurrency[6] mining. In March, the government said[7] it is “not interested” in providing cheap electricity to crypto miners without anything in return. Premier Philippe Couillard said:
“There needs to be added value for our society; just having servers to do transaction mining and acquire new bitcoins, I don’t see the added value.”
In May, the government of Quebec announced it would lift the moratorium[8] on the sale of power to crypto miners in order to “avoid missing the ship” on digital currency. The Minister of Energy, Pierre Moreau, was going to introduce a decree on the regulation of electrical power sale to crypto miners, who require massive amounts of power for their operations. The decree would reportedly set different rates for digital currency miners and allow energy companies to practice forced offloading.
Hydro-Quebec,