Insects and cryptocurrency meet to provide a sustainable animal food source in Cashmere – wenatcheeworld.com

CASHMERE A former apple juice factory in Cashmere will soon be home to a mealworm farm heated by cryptocurrency computers.

Seattle startup Beta Hatch is building a 40,000-square-foot production space in the former Tree Top facility to raise mealworms, a variety of beetle larva. The mealworms are dried and sold as a sustainable food source for poultry, fish and other livestock.

The company has been planning a move to Cashmere for more than a year and in 2019 won the top prize at at GWATA's Flywheel Investment Conference. After a few pandemic-related delays, Beta Hatch held a ceremonial groundbreaking last Wednesday and plans to begin construction within a few weeks.

Were just excited to get the project underway and continue to grow the business, CEO and Founder Virginia Emery said. Its a hard time for any kind of business, but the great thing about the food business is that everyone needs to eat so weve stayed open and active. And were continuing to grow despite the challenges.

Virginia Emery, founder and CEO of Beta Hatch

Their new building was home to Tree Top for 50 years untiloperationsstopped in 2008.First Beta Hatch will build a smaller ramp-up production area in the space to raise their tiny livestock while the full-scale operation is built out. Thats expected to be operational by November.

Mealworms, a type of beetle larva, are dried and used to feed poultry, fish and other livestock.

It allows us to scale the biology, because we cant just buy the billions of bugs that we need. We have to grow them. So it allows us to account for the generation time, Emery said.

When the full production space is done, the facility will produce around a ton of mealworms a day for distribution. But its primary output will be eggs billions of them every day.

This facility is an interesting one because we have a hub and spoke model. So the hub is the hatchery where you produce the eggs and the spoke is the ranch where you grow the product, Emery said. This facility will operate as a bit of a hybrid.

Beta Hatch is also looking for locations for those ranches, including in states like Idaho, Iowa or California, where they could be located near agricultural partners.

Wed love to have some ranches here, we could see adding capacity right here in Cashmere or somewhere else in Wenatchee, Emery said. But the beauty of the model is we can send eggs anywhere in the country.

Beta Hatchs Cashmere facility will be the largest of its kind in North America, Emery said.

Beta Hatch CEO Virginia Emery, center, held a ceremonial groundbreaking last Wednesday with officials from the city of Cashmere, U.S. Rep. Kim Schrier, and Malachi Salcido, whose next-door cryptocurrency mine will provide heat for the operation. The facility will raise mealworms, a type of beetle larva, for use in animal feed.

There are other facilities that grow mealworms for exotic animals but were the first to really focus on that commercial animal feed market with these bugs, she said.

She hopes theyll provide a more sustainable alternative to many of the ingredients currently used in the commercial animal feed market.

So, trying to look at the existing ingredients we have in animal diets that arent very sustainable, are very expensive, that have supply chains that rely on a lot of import or are susceptible to climate those are the kinds of ingredients that we can be replacing, she said.

One possible target in North Central Washington is fish hatcheries, Emery said.

Weve done tests where every growth stage of the fish has happily eaten a mealworm diet, she said. So we see a lot of opportunity in multiple species and multiple growth stages of the fish.

Beta Hatch is also looking to provide sustainability in its mealworm growing process. Part of the insects diet will likely be leftovers from Crunch Paks production facility, which is just a mile away.

Crunch Pak is right here down the road, probably as short as you can get as far as transportation of a food stock, Emery said. Theres plenty of perfectly good apple material that comes off their food line that they cant use. They have actually a very good program for getting those food stocks out to other food manufactures, people make cider and dried apples and other products with it, and so we would take a small piece of that for feeding our bugs.

Its quest for sustainability also brought Beta Hatch to Malachi Salcido, who runs a cryptocurrency mine in the other half of the former Tree Top building.

His cryptocurrency mining computers generate a significant amount of heat, which is currently exhausted out of the building using massive fans. Instead, some of that heat would be rerouted to Beta Hatchs production and growing rooms, which require around 78-degree temperatures and 70% humidity.

So for it to be warm and really humid takes a lot of heat energy, Salcido said. So one of the purposes of waste heat will be to boost the temperature part-way up the temperature and humidity hill. Then all of the mechanical systems dont have to start from ambient.

Salcido operates several other cryptocurrency and data centers in North Central Washington, but this is the first of its kind utilizing heat recapture. But the model could be useful for other agricultural industries, including cannabis farms, he said.

This kind of heat output recapture, we think there are going to be more kinds of applications for this. We expect to see and possibly be involved in heat recapture for cannabis grows, because cannabis needs to be as humid as possible without growing mold, he said.

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Insects and cryptocurrency meet to provide a sustainable animal food source in Cashmere - wenatcheeworld.com

Yearn.Finance: How Ethereum’s DeFi Darling YFI Reached $1 Billion In 2 Months – Forbes

Ethereum-based yearn.finance and its governance token YFI evolved into a major DeFi player.

Yearn.finance's native governance token, YFI, is now the second-biggest decentralized finance (DeFi) coin in the cryptocurrency market. Its market capitalization has surpassed $1.1 billion just one and a half months after its launch.

Four major components contributed to the rapid success of yearn.finance: unique supply, an active community, a respected developer, and innovative products.

Unique Supply, No Premine, Decentralized

The process of yearn.finances launch garnered the attention of many DeFi enthusiasts since the beginning.

Andrew Cronje, the main developer behind yearn.finance, rebranded, and relaunched iearn.finance with a suite of products. Cronje released YFI with no premine, a fixed supply of just 30,000 tokens, and no founder reward.

The transparent and decentralized launch of yearn.finance, which also gives YFI token holders all the governance rights, made the DeFi protocol unique.

The lead developer behind it, Andre Cronje, decided that he would create a $YFI token, and with that pass over control/governance of the entire yearn.finance suite of tools. Despite having the power to give himself a pre-mine or founder reward, he elected instead to keep zero tokens for himself, Daryl Lau, a contributor to Deribit Insights, explained.

A part of the intrigue behind YFI was its token. YFI has a fixed supply of 30,000, which led to the price of each individual token surpassing that of Bitcoin. But, in terms of market capitalization, even at a price point of around $38,300, its market cap is less than $1.2 billion. In contrast, the market cap of Bitcoin is at $216 billion.

The price chart of YFI, the native governance token of yearn.finance.

Respected Developer, Fast Shipping Speed

Cronje, despite receiving no major financial incentives from the YFI launch, has consistently shipped out new DeFi-related products.

Most recently, as an example, yearn.finance announced the launch of yinsure.finance.Yinsure will provide insurance coverage to DeFi users.

The developer has collaborated with various top developers and executives in the cryptocurrency industry. On August 28, Cronje hinted at a collaborative project with Sam Bankman-Fried, the CEO of FTX, one of the largest derivatives exchanges in the cryptocurrency sector. Bankman-Fried is also the chief executive of Alameda Research, a cryptocurrency trading firm and OTC desk.

Guess the cat is out of the bag, but just so that there is some expectation management, this is a long roadmap that we are working on, so it won't be anything anytime soon. But there will be something very sexy in the future, Cronje said.

The confluence of a low and unique supply model, a transparent launch, and an active developer eventually led yearn.finance to evolve into one of the largest DeFi protocols across various metrics.

According to data from DefiPulse, there is more than $790 million in total value locked in the yearn.finance protocol. It trails just behind Synthetix, Aave, and Maker.

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Yearn.Finance: How Ethereum's DeFi Darling YFI Reached $1 Billion In 2 Months - Forbes

The Dawn Of A Global Cryptocurrency – Forbes India

Image: ShutterstockAs of June 18, 2019, Facebooks closely guarded cryptocurrency project was no longer a secret. Thats the day the Creative Destruction Lab (CDL) announced that it would be joining Facebook and 26 other organizations as a founding partner of the Libra Association to create Libraa simple global currency and financial infrastructure that will empower billions of people. Headquartered in Geneva, the Libra Association will govern the infrastructure and manage and evolve this new ecosystem, enabling developers and businesses to build inclusive new financial service products for people around the world.

Set to launch in 2020, the currency will be backed by a reserve of real assets, providing low volatility and encouraging widespread global acceptance. The goal is for thoughtfully designed smart contracts operating on a widely accessible and stable global currency platform to unlock never-before-seen gains from trade, benefiting society at a meaningful scale.

Q. First of all, for those who dont know, what is the Creative Destruction Lab?The CDL is a not-for-profit program that initially began at the Rotman School of Management and has since expanded to sites at other universities including the University of British Columbia, University of Calgary, Dalhousie University in Halifax, HEC Montreal and the Said School at Oxford University (CDL-Oxford). CDL takes science-based, seed-stage start-ups and through a nine-month program of mentorship by some hugely successful entrepreneurs, takes them to market. In particular, we have focussed in recent years on AI and Quantum computing technologies. Hundreds have graduated the program since 2012 with equity valued of $4.2 billion created to date by CDL ventures.

I am the Chief Economist at CDL and I also run an incubator stream at CDL-Toronto that focusses on using the blockchain to generate new marketplaces, contract forms and other applications. We have 400 ventures per year in our program (including 25 in the Blockchain stream). Because the companies in our incubator stream are even earlier than our other streams, we provide ventures with economics and business training as well as some essential technical training. It is because of our blockchain stream that Facebook approached us to become a founding partners.

Q. Is this Facebook's currency?Facebook is not planning to issue its own currency, but instead has provided the code and development necessary for a new currency to be issued in its own right. As indicated, the Libra Association will manage that currency and will be eventually made up of 100 diverse organizations, of which Facebook (or more particularly its subsidiary, Calibra) will be just one. Each member will have one vote in making critical decisions in the Libra Association.

Q. What exactly is the Libra Association?At the heart of the Association is this new cryptocurrency called Libra. This cryptocurrency will not be like most of the others out there. It will be designed to have a more stable value with an exchange rate pegged to a basket of currencieswhich means it will have a stable exchange rate unless those main currencies change in value against one another, in which case, the bilateral exchange rate between Libra and those currencies will change. Of course, there will be fluctuations in the bilateral exchange rate between Libra and currencies not part of the peg, but in theory, volatility should be as low as you can practically get.

This pegged currency will be achieved in a robust way: Every token will be backed by low-risk assets (currency and Treasury bills) in the currency basket. And that management will be transparent, audited etc. The idea is that Libra will be a store of value designed to ensure it is an accepted medium of exchange, but it will not be a security that is intended to change in value based on measures of success or otherwise. In other words, Libra tokens will be issued on-demand as people exchange low-risk assets to acquire them, and then retired when the reverse happens.

All of this will be made possible by the Libra Blockchain, which will store records of transactions and other relevant information. While this blockchain will be permissioned (i.e. only those designated by the association can become nodes), it will be distributed amongst the 100 (at least initially). We expect that CDL will be one of those nodes. The job will be to run a server independently that votes or endorses blocks to form a consensus on the networkthat is, that blocks are valid, and things have not been altered. It is precisely this feature that was the key innovation in Bitcoin a decade ago that allowed cryptocurrencies to be possible.

Q. Why will the blockchain be permissioned?A permissionless blockchain means that anyone can operate a node because it has free entry. In the case of Bitcoin, this also allows free entry in being able to compete to mint Bitcoins which is why mining has become a lucrative activity and why proof of work systems like Bitcoinclever though they aretend to be very costly to run, given that the outcome is something purely digital. The idea of proof of work is to ensure that no one creates nodes for free.

In other words, if you want to be part of voting for a consensus, then you have to show something for it. One way around that is to prove something else of value. The most common idea is a proof of stake system whereby you put something of value and make it illiquid, and that gives you voting rights. A final way of ensuring that bad actors wont just populate nodes is to simply regulate who can run a node, and this is what a permissioned system does. It is not a free for all, and some power likely comes from being part of the conversation. But this is also what you need to run an efficient network. Libra made a different choice between decentralisation and efficiency than other blockchains.

It is critical to note that Libra will be distributed. Its 100 nodes have pretty diverse interests. Some care about payments; some care about start-up innovation; some care about social goals; and some care about a mixture of these thingslike CDL.

Facebook chose not to make this a Facebook thing, which makes it an exciting development in this space. I should add that Facebooks clear push for having Libra be more open and independent of it squares well with my expectation that Facebooks interest is not in payments per se but, instead, in activities that will enhance its platform objectives based on connections and interactions.

Facebooks interest is in laying down base infrastructure that will allow transactions to be conducted at low cost (even for tiny transactions) around the globe. They have worked to develop their own wallet for this purpose that will be integrated into Messenger and Whatsapp and elsewhere. If others build use cases for the currency that only helps in the currencys popularity and usefulness as a medium of exchange on Facebooks platform.

This brings me to what is essential here: the code. The advantage of having a digitized currency is that it can be easily transferred with a rich code base. To be sure, banks and other financial institutions have digitized money but, to the extent there is code, it is not something that anyone would describe as interoperable with what is, these days, some surprising distance from the rest of the economy. This has happened because security and money are not tied to one another. But with cryptocurrency, security is, literally, there and in the name. That means that more can potentially be done.

One example of this potential is, of course, what has come to be known as smart contracting. There is an excellent potential to use a code layer integrated with a payments mechanism to solve the fundamental smart contract challenge that arises because contracts interact with human decision-making. (Other examples include voting mechanisms such as quadratic voting or token reputation registries. These latter mechanisms also require a means of identity verification that is something that the Libra infrastructure could potentially support.

Alongside this, a new programming language, Move, has been developed and will be launched with the Libra Blockchain. Unlike Ethereum, which pioneered this idea, initially the code will be restricted to a set of templates until it can be proven to work in the wild. So while the promise of the code will be there, there will be some caution in the roll-out. It will be up to the Association to manage that process. In my mind, this will be a critically important set of decisions.

Q. What does CDL hope to gain from this?CDL does not have a financial interest in this associationor in any of the ventures that come through our program. Our mission is purely social. We are in the business of creating start-up ecosystems that do not require a fixed physical location. In that regard, we see Libra as a public utility that can support just thattaking digital payments to the next level to allow an application layer that could transform economic transactions and more.

While we believe that there is an opportunity for start-ups going through our program (especially those in our Blockchain stream),in the longer-term the real opportunity is for all start-ups, and that is our focus. By participating in creating a better start-up ecosystem, we will be fulfilling the CDLs core mission.

Q. Where do you think all of this will lead?We take the Lab part of Creative Destruction Lab very seriously. For that reason, we believe that everything we do is an experimentand Libra is no different. While there have been 18 months of technical development on the part of Facebook into this, as we know from our experience with entrepreneurial ventures until something hits the market, you cannot truly obtain signals as to its potential. There is too much uncertainty associated with innovation.

The range of outcomes is broad. Libra could be simply a new payments mechanism that improves financial access for many people in the world. Or we might look back in a few decades and see this the seed of a new wave of global connectivity not seen since the establishment of the modern monetary economy post-World War II with the Bretton Woods system. Or this may be the first of several new monetary platforms to emerge that began with Bitcoin, Ethereum to Libra and maybe others that are still in or to be developed. So the short answer is that I dont know where this will lead, but I am very excited that it is happening.

Q. What is next?For six months post-announcement, the founding members and partners have been meeting to work out the by-laws. My expectation is that there will be a series of meetings that will work similarly to a Constitutional Convention. How those will operate is anyones guess at this stage. However, I will be leading the CDL contingent in that endeavour.

The voice we expect to bring to the table is one that is squarely focussed on promoting start-up innovation. Moreover, where possible, we will be driven by the principles of open science so that discussions, consultation and data will be transparent and available. For the latest news on this initiative, visit http://libra.orgJoshua Gans holds the Jeffrey S. Skoll Chair in Technical Innovation and Entrepreneurship and Chief Economist of the Creative Destruction Lab at the Rotman School of Management, with a cross-appointment to the University of Torontos Department of Economics. He is the co-author (with Andrew Leigh) of Innovation + Equality: Creating a future that is more Star Trek than Terminator (MIT Press, 2019) and the co-author (with Rotman Professors Ajay Agrawal and Avi Goldfarb) of Prediction Machines: The Simple Economics of Artificial Intelligence (Harvard Business Review Press, 2018).

[This article has been reprinted, with permission, from Rotman Management, the magazine of the University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management]

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The Dawn Of A Global Cryptocurrency - Forbes India