A string of tweets by Quebecois Bitcoin-mining expert Jonathan Bertrand reveals a growing negative sentiment among Bitcoin miners in Quebec.

A recent string of tweets by Quebecois Bitcoin-mining expert Jonathan Bertrand has revealed a growing negative sentiment among crypto-miners within the Canadian province. The tweets come as a response to a politically charged debate in Quebec regarding the closed-auction system now being used to determine which mining operations will be allowed to buy electricity from the province. Furthermore, the tweets hint at heavy lobbying from mining-giant Bitmain as a potential reason why the province is no longer looking to sell electricity to smaller domestic mining operations.

The province of Quebec offers the lowest electricity rates in North America, and during the crypto-boom of late 2017, the province became a highly desirable destination for aspiring bitcoin mining operations. At the time, the provincially owned utility, Hydro-Quebec (HQ), encouraged potential mining operations to come to Quebec, promising to sell 5TWh of electricity to Bitcoin miners over 4 years. However, in February of 2018, HQ implemented a moratorium on applications for bitcoin mining operations due to a large number of requests totaling 18000 MWh. Because the requested amount of electricity was far greater than the province could supply, the sale of electricity was halted, and a review process was implemented to help ensure these operations would generate added value for Quebec,

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. / Philippe Couillard, Premier of Quebec (Feb 2018)

Now, in July, it appears as though the province is willing to consider mining applications once again, but according to Jonathan Bertrand, these considerations are not being made for the sake of Quebec or its citizens,

Bitmain is one of the largest crypto-mining operations in the world, and Bertrand and his supporting community of Quebecois bitcoin miners believe the mining-giant is trying to monopolize the industry in Quebec. Bertrand even goes so far as to accuse Bitmain of faking a number of applications in order to push the province into reassessing their offer to sell electricity to any mining operation that wants it.

Ultimately, Bertrand believes this type of lobbying is making Quebec a near-impossible place for domestic mining farms to operate, leaving many in the industry to consider leaving the province,

The situation in Quebec reflects the larger state of the crypto mining industry and has many within the space beginning to question whether entities like Bitmain can really provide mining services without compromising the integrity of decentralized networks. Bitmain is well-known for nefarious actions, and as exemplified by the Antminer X3 scandal that led to the Monero hard fork, the broader community simply cannot trust large mining pools to keep integrity at the center of their revenue strategies. Because of this, many are beginning to question whether major cryptocurrencies will be able to remain decentralized in the face of industrial progress.