Alderney Eyes Bitcoin Mining To Become The Next ‘BTC Island’

Source Bitcoinist

At Bitcoin Amsterdam on 13 November, Alderney politician Edward Hill delivered a direct pitch to the BTC community: help turn his tiny Channel Island into a Bitcoin-first jurisdiction, anchored in renewable energy and a pro-BTC regulatory stance.

Hill opened by situating Alderney politically and geographically. “I’m from the little island of Alderney, which you may know are sister islands, Jersey and Guernsey that are traditional finance centers,” he said. “We are a Channel Island, but we are semi-independent. We are part of the Bailiwick of Guernsey and we’re located 8 miles from France. We are a self-governing jurisdiction. We’re [a] British crown dependency, but we’re in partial fiscal union with our sister island in the Bailiwick of Guernsey.”

The Next Bitcoin Island?

From there, he moved quickly to why Alderney is now courting Bitcoin. Hill stressed that the government is actively seeking a strategic partner from within the ecosystem: “Why do we think Alderney could be attractive for potential Bitcoin entrepreneurs? We’re looking for somebody to take us on this journey.” He added later, “We are not Bitcoin specialists. I am from the government of the States of Alderney, but we are here to listen and learn.”

A core part of his pitch is that Alderney already knows how to build digital industries under regulation. “Most importantly, we already have an established e-gaming industry which produces a GDP around about 84 billion million,” he said, tying that to an institutional template: “We want to mirror all these success in e-gaming where we have our own e-gaming commission and we have professional staff who handle that […] and ditto we’ve done the same with our renewables as well. So what we’re looking to do is extend that to Bitcoin.”

Hill repeatedly framed Alderney as a flexible, low-friction jurisdiction for BTC companies and individuals. “We’re small and [a] stable government and we have a big appetite to diversify our economy,” he said. “We have an open canvas for you to match the business lifestyle requirements that we know that you’re looking for and have been unable to find without having to travel probably thousands of miles to more remote offshore centers.”

He hammered home Alderney’s fiscal offer in plain terms. “We’re also very attractive from a tax point of view. No corporation tax, no capital gains tax, no VAT, no inheritance tax, and personal income tax of only 20%. I’m sure you all like that.” On top of that, the island imposes no wealth-based hurdles for newcomers: “We have no financial entry requirements for residency or house purchase. So you can come, you can buy a house. You do not have to pay vast fortunes in early buying expensive houses.”

The most distinctive element, however, was energy. Hill linked Alderney’s major natural asset directly to Bitcoin mining: “Our island is located in one of the strongest tidal flows in the world and we are looking to at some stage with our exceptional tidal flow […] to link Bitcoin mining with renewable energy.” He added a striking visual twist by pointing to Alderney’s Victorian coastal defences: “These Victorian forts are already waiting for somebody to come and maybe set up some kind of Bitcoin community entrepreneur and also potentially to store Bitcoin mining systems.”

On regulation, Hill emphasised that Alderney sits under Guernsey oversight but is actively engaging to make the regime fit BTC better. “We also are regulated by the Guernsey Financial Service Commission and they’re open to engage with us and with you about making the regulatory framework more usable for Bitcoin.” He drew a clear boundary around the initiative: “We will only be working with Bitcoin, no other asset.”

He then outlined the scope of what Alderney is looking to build with the right partner: “Attracting new Bitcoin businesses to our island […] establishment of [a] Bitcoin research engineering campus, some kind of business park, a potential neo bank.” Education and values are part of that package. Hill said the island wants “public and government Bitcoin education to teach our community all about what you’re really about to dispel some of the skepticisms and rumors.”

For that, he insisted, Alderney needs a deeply involved counterpart, not just registrations. “We’re looking for a production of some kind of strategic document… someone who could implement a plan and provide local education in Bitcoin and capacity building and also execute that plan with mutual agreement from ourselves as the States of Alderney.”

Alderney’s gambit also places it in a small but growing club of islands that have tried to brand around BTC: the Isle of Man has long been marketed as “Bitcoin Island” as it attracted exchanges and payment startups under a bespoke regulatory regime, while Boracay in the Philippines has been promoted as “BTC Island” on the back of Lightning-based merchant adoption.

Malta, for its part, styled itself as the “Blockchain Island,” and Madeira has leaned into its reputation as one of Europe’s most Bitcoin-friendly islands—context that Alderney now aims to update with its own, explicitly Bitcoin-only, renewables-driven twist.

At press time, BTC traded at $96,799.

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