Sichuan Province is home to one of China’s largest bitcoin mines, where mining machines are used to produce cryptocurrency that is sought by entrepreneurial Chinese investors.
Sichuan Province is home to one of China’s largest bitcoin mines, where mining machines are used to produce cryptocurrency that is sought by entrepreneurial Chinese investors.
Photo: Youtube
As of this article, Bitcoin is trading around $2,300 after falling below $2,000 over the weekend, which is worth more than the standard unit of gold, which is an ounce.
On the whole, the cryptocurrency market reached $84.9 billion on Tuesday, a 40% increase from a $61 billion low this weekend, CoinDesk reported.
Photo: Bitconnect
Chinese photographer Liu Xingzhe visited Sichuan’s Ngawa (Aba) Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture, about 175 miles outside of Chengdu, to familiarize himself with how Bitcoin mining machinery works and the miners who live in dormitories taking care of business for days on end.
A Bitcoin “mine” with a blue tin roof sits next to a hydroelectric power plant in Ngawa (Aba) Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan Province. Located at the eastern edge of the Tibetan Plateau, the area has abundant hydropower, a key factor in making energy intensive mines cost effective. Electricity typically accounts for 60-70% of a bitcoin mine’s expenses. Photo: nextshark.com
According to ChinaFile, one worker, who lives in one of the dorms with his colleagues, said that the nearest town is about 20 miles away, paying to hitchhike there once a week.
“The good thing is, there isn’t anywhere to spend money, so you can save your whole salary,” the miner said.
Employees use their phones at the Bitcoin mine. The mine has 550 “mining machines” running continuously. They solve complicated mathematical problems for which they are rewarded with Bitcoins. Seven employees work in shifts monitoring the machines to keep the mine running 24 hours a day. Photo: nextshark.com
Bitcoin mine owner Liu (pictured below, left), 29, moved to Sichuan Province from Henan Province back in 2015 for cheaper and more abundant hydroelectricity.
He now manages more than 7,000 mining rigs for clients who pay for Bitcoin across China, who are able to remotely monitor the machines and earnings via smartphone apps.
Bitcoin mining has also become increasingly popular in remote areas of Sichuan Province due to cheap labor and computing power (paywall), according to Quartz.
(Liu Xingzhe/ChinaFile) Photo: nextshark.com
Huang, 25, Kun’s brother, inspects a malfunctioning mining machine during his night shift. Miners can check a machine’s condition and operations using phones and personal computers. For most issues, they can simply restart a machine. “If it’s a complicated problem, we just ship it to the factory and let them fix it,” Huang said. Photo:nextshark.com
An employee at the hydroelectric power plant checks electric generators. Kun convinced the owner of the hydroelectric power plant to build a Bitcoin mine next to the power plant. Photo:nextshark.com
Bitcoin miners attended the first China Bitcoin Miner Conference, at Chengdu Tianfu Financial Center, in Sichuan Province. Photo: nextshark.com
Packing boxes for mining machines pile up in an employee dormitory. Kun recently purchased new mining machines: the AntMiner S7 ($490) which has greater computing power than the AntMiner S5 ($140) it would replace. 550 mining machines, a combination of S7 and S5 models, running 24 hours can mine 2.5 Bitcoins a day, according to Kun — worth around $6,400. Photo:nextshark.com
Tibetan women wait for a party hosted by Kun to celebrate the mining machines’ upgrade Photo:nextshark.com
Liu, 29, stands in front of a wall of cooling fans at his Bitcoin mine where he houses and operates mining machines for miners who don’t want to move to rural Sichuan, in Ngawa Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan Province Photo:nextshark.com
Internet cables and power cables at Liu’s mine Photo:nextshark.com
Sun, in his early twenties, is an employee of a Bitcoin mine in Ngawa Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan Province. Photo: nextshark.com
Packing materials for mining machines pile up beside the water-cooling system at Sun’s mine Photo: nextshark.com
Sun’s colleagues rest in their dorm . They live at the mine, which is so remote the nearest public transportation is 20 miles away, in the nearest town. They pay to hitchhike there once a week. “The good thing is, there isn’t anywhere to spend money, so you can save your whole salary,” Sun says. Photo: nextshark.com
Employees use their phones near the mine Sun works. Photo: nextshark.com
Goats from a nearby village walk among cooling fans at the mine Photo: nextshark.com
Stacks of AntMiner S9 mining machines ready to be shipped to clients around the world, at Bitmain Technologies’ manufacturing base in Shenzhen. Bitmain and Canaan, another Chinese company, dominate the global mining hardware market. Photo: nextshark.com
Employees work on an assembly line of AntMiner S9 mining machine at Bitmain’s manufacturing base, Shenzhen. Photo: nextshark.com
A researcher works in a lab at Bitmain’s manufacturing base, Shenzhen Photo: nextshark.com
An employee puts labels on AntMiner S9 mining machines, in Shenzhen. The AntMiner S9 is the most efficient mining machine on the consumer market right now and is produced by a Chinese company called Bitmain. It’s current cost is $1,113. Due to the high price of bitcoin, its has been out of stock for a long time. The price in the black market is almost doubled. Photo: nextshark.com
Bitcoin miners add each other on social media (Wechat) after attending the first China Bitcoin Miner Conference, at Chengdu Tianfu Financial Center, in Sichuan Province. They use Wechat to exchange information of encryption currency. Photo: nextshark.com
Employees work at BTCChina (BTCC)’s office, in Shanghai’s financial district . BTCC was founded in 2011, and is now one of China’s largest Bitcoin exchange platforms. According to its CEO, Bobby Lee, Chinese people like the “online gambling” feel of Bitcoin’s instability; also, with the Chinese government’s restrictions on many investment channels, people welcome new ways to invest their money. Photo: nextshark.com
Employees use their phones to play games and watch TV drama near the mine Sun works for Photo:nextshark.com
Employee resembles calculation board at Liu’s mine Photo: nextshark.com
A 29-year-old Tibetan named Kun walks in between aisles of mining machines, 26 September 2016. Kun is the mine’s manager as well as one of its investors. He learned about Bitcoin through a friend and started investing Photo: nextshark.com
A mountain road winds toward Bitcoin mines, in Ngawa Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan Province. Sichuan is also called “the capital of bitcoin mining”. Photo: nextshark.com
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