Bitfarms expands into Pennsylvania amid Riot’s growing stake

Bitcoin mining company Bitfarms announced its expansion into the United States on June 14, establishing a new site in Sharon, Pennsylvania.According to the firm’s official press release, Bitfarms has agreed to develop up to 120 megawatts (MW) of power capacity in the region.The new site within the Pennsylvania-New Jersey Maryland (PJM) Interconnection will grant Bitfarms access to competitive electricity rates and opportunities that help the firm “optimize and hedge energy costs.”Related: Bitfarms pushes back against Riot’s $950M takeover attemptExpansion of operationsThe expansion is expected to improve Bitfarms’ operational footprint, support 8 EH/s capacity by 2025, and increase the company’s total power capacity to 648 MW — a 170% increase from the current capacity. Nicolas Bonta, chairman and interim CEO of Bitfarms, commented on the expansion:Related: Riot acquires 13% Bitfarms stake as CEO decries ‘poison pill‘ strategyStrategic implications The Sharon expansion is strategically positioned within a deregulated state, allowing the Bitcoin (BTC) mining firm to “participate in demand response and other curtailment programs.”Speaking on the expansion’s diversification of revenue stream accessibility, Ben Gagnon, chief mining officer of Bitfarms, said:Related: Bitfarms adopts shareholder rights plan as Riot attempts takeoverRiot Platforms increases stake in BitfarmsAlongside Bitfarms’ expansion announcement, Riot Platforms also announced its increased ownership stake in Bitfarms to 14%.The additional 1,432,063 common shares of Bitfarms acquired by Riot represent approximately 0.35% of Bitfarms’ issued and outstanding shares.Riot’s additional Bitfarms stake acquisition follows the recent recovery from a share price dip sparked by claims the firm would collapse.Magazine: Deepfake AI ‘gang’ drains $11M OKX account, Zipmex zapped by SEC: Asia Express