Amid soaring energy prices, farmers are facing a hard time.
The situation is not any better for greenhouse farmers in the Netherlands, the world's biggest tulip producer and also the second biggest agricultural exporter overall after the United States.
Huge energy costs have driven some Dutch agricultural firms that often rely on greenhouses to stop growing tulips this year, while others have even gone bankrupt.
"Some growers have decided, because of the increase in gas prices, to stop growing this year and see what happens next year. And in some cases it leads to bankruptcy," said flower farmer Danielle Koning.
To avoid going out of business and creeping overhead costs, Koning has teamed up with a Bitcoin mining firm to heat her giant greenhouse near Amsterdam with mining servers.
Mining for cryptocurrency generates a great amount of heat while requiring huge amounts of electricity to power computer rigs.
"So, Bitcoin miners, they produce a lot of heat. You have a delta [difference] of approximately 20 degrees Celsius between the temperature that goes into the miner and what comes out of the miner,” Bert de Groot, owner of Bitcoin Brabant, explained. And it's because the processors in this computer are constantly trying to guess a random number and that produces some heat".
This is where Koning sees the venture as being a "win-win situation".
The warmth generated by the rigs is now being used to heat the hothouse where rows of tulips grow, cutting the farmers' reliance on gas.
The servers in turn are powered by solar energy from the roof, reducing the normally huge electricity costs for mining, and cutting its potential impact on the environment.
The flower farmer and the mining firm have split ownership of the servers and
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