NEMS26: Keynote: Monetizing the Megawatt
Bitcoin Mining—The 21st Century Path to Human Flourishing
Robert Warren, Head of Research and Education at Bitcoin Park, delivered an opening keynote at the recent Nashville Energy & Mining Summit, portraying Bitcoin mining as the fulfillment of industrial-era visions like Henry Ford's assembly lines, now realized through decentralized, flexible energy use that drives human flourishing.
Speaking to an audience of miners, technologists, investors, and energy innovators, Warren argued that energy equals human flourishing, supported by historical and empirical evidence linking power access to progress. He traced the Industrial Revolution from Britain's early innovations to Ford's Highland Park "Crystal Palace," a 130-acre campus that pioneered the moving assembly line, but was limited by location dependency, supply chain interruptions, and the need to sell finished products.
Bitcoin mining, Warren argues, overcomes these constraints. Operations are location-invariant with internet access, fully curtailable without loss, and produce hash rate, a commodity instantly monetized via pools like Braiins or Foundry, enabling continuous production that Ford envisioned but could not achieve.
The presentation spotlighted real-world applications where Bitcoin mining monetizes stranded or wasted energy. In rural Africa, Gridless revives dormant hydroelectric plants, paying owners from day one for full-capacity operation while reducing local electricity costs, directly boosting community access to power.
In the U.S., CleanSpark has deployed hundreds of megawatts, creating hundreds of jobs and enhancing grid stability across states. Other examples include the Cholla Innovation Lab in West Texas, which tests mining's grid-stabilizing role with operators and regulators; Exergy's waste-heat monetization; decentralized nodes from FutureBit in Brooklyn for education; and Midwest operators like Megawatt, which influenced local laws to repurpose infrastructure and now bid into day-ahead markets, stabilizing local energy prices.
"Bitcoin mining isn't just about hash rate," Warren emphasized. "It's about unlocking human flourishing through energy that was previously wasted or underutilized."
He urged the community to share personal stories rather than raw data when explaining Bitcoin's energy dynamics, citing author Michael Lewis: "The truth is like poetry. And most people...hate poetry." He thanked contributors, case study participants, and attendees for decentralizing what Ford centralized, crediting collective efforts over singular visionaries. Bitcoin Park, a collaborative space advancing grassroots freedom technologies, opened with this talk as a framework for ongoing discussions on energy's role in prosperity, particularly in underserved regions.
Bitcoin Mining—The 21st Century Path to Human Flourishing
Robert Warren, Head of Research and Education at Bitcoin Park, delivered an opening keynote at the recent Nashville Energy & Mining Summit, portraying Bitcoin mining as the fulfillment of industrial-era visions like Henry Ford's assembly lines, now realized through decentralized, flexible energy use that drives human flourishing.
Speaking to an audience of miners, technologists, investors, and energy innovators, Warren argued that energy equals human flourishing, supported by historical and empirical evidence linking power access to progress. He traced the Industrial Revolution from Britain's early innovations to Ford's Highland Park "Crystal Palace," a 130-acre campus that pioneered the moving assembly line, but was limited by location dependency, supply chain interruptions, and the need to sell finished products.
Bitcoin mining, Warren argues, overcomes these constraints. Operations are location-invariant with internet access, fully curtailable without loss, and produce hash rate, a commodity instantly monetized via pools like Braiins or Foundry, enabling continuous production that Ford envisioned but could not achieve.
The presentation spotlighted real-world applications where Bitcoin mining monetizes stranded or wasted energy. In rural Africa, Gridless revives dormant hydroelectric plants, paying owners from day one for full-capacity operation while reducing local electricity costs, directly boosting community access to power.
In the U.S., CleanSpark has deployed hundreds of megawatts, creating hundreds of jobs and enhancing grid stability across states. Other examples include the Cholla Innovation Lab in West Texas, which tests mining's grid-stabilizing role with operators and regulators; Exergy's waste-heat monetization; decentralized nodes from FutureBit in Brooklyn for education; and Midwest operators like Megawatt, which influenced local laws to repurpose infrastructure and now bid into day-ahead markets, stabilizing local energy prices.
"Bitcoin mining isn't just about hash rate," Warren emphasized. "It's about unlocking human flourishing through energy that was previously wasted or underutilized."
He urged the community to share personal stories rather than raw data when explaining Bitcoin's energy dynamics, citing author Michael Lewis: "The truth is like poetry. And most people...hate poetry." He thanked contributors, case study participants, and attendees for decentralizing what Ford centralized, crediting collective efforts over singular visionaries. Bitcoin Park, a collaborative space advancing grassroots freedom technologies, opened with this talk as a framework for ongoing discussions on energy's role in prosperity, particularly in underserved regions.
Oil and Gas All in on Remote Bitcoin Mining
Austin, Texas – January 20, 2026
360 Energy, a leading provider of mobile natural gas offtake solutions, is transforming excess and flared natural gas into reliable power for off-grid Bitcoin mining, delivering economic and environmental benefits to upstream oil and gas operators while contributing to decentralized Bitcoin hashrate.
Founded in 2021 by Chris Alfano and headquartered in Austin, Texas, 360 Energy co-locates EPA-certified natural gas generators and modular Bitcoin mining data centers directly at oil and gas well sites. The company captures stranded, uneconomic, or flared gas, often a liability for producers, and converts it into low-cost electricity (sub-2 cents per kWh) to power mining operations. This approach addresses three primary needs for oil and gas companies: maximizing gas value in oversupplied regions like the Permian Basin, reducing emissions through flare capture, and enabling continued oil production by avoiding regulatory shut-ins in areas with limited flaring allowances.
Unlike traditional models that struggled with uptime and incentives, 360 Energy's rental-based service eliminates upfront capital expenditure for operators. Producers pay a monthly fee for the equipment while retaining most revenue from mining rewards, ensuring reliable gas offtake and high operational uptime. The company emphasizes rigorous site diligence, including gas analysis, to deploy tailored infrastructure that handles varying gas compositions and production profiles.
"By listening to oil and gas operators and translating Bitcoin mining into terms they value, such as increased cash flow, lower emissions, and unlocked oil production, we've built a sustainable service model," said Chris Alfano, founder and CEO of 360 Energy. "Our focus remains on Bitcoin as the core application, providing one of the lowest-cost mining operations globally while distributing hashrate across diverse locations and subtly introducing more industry participants to Bitcoin's potential."
360 Energy operates across key U.S. basins and is exploring international expansion, leveraging partnerships like Halliburton for operational support in regions such as Argentina's Vaca Muerta Basin. The company reports strong demand for its Apex Gas Offtake solution as an alternative to flaring or shut-ins, with U.S. flared gas volumes alone offering potential for over 2 gigawatts of computing power.
As Bitcoin mining evolves amid growing energy demands, 360 Energy's model demonstrates how stranded energy resources can drive mutual benefits across traditional energy and freedom technology sectors.