BitFury has raised $20m in additional funding to complete development of its 28nm ASIC chip capable of achieving energy efficiency of 0.2 joules-per-gigahash (J/GH) and first announced in September.
The news marks the second time this year BitFury has raised $20m in new financing, following its initial Series A in May. The funding was largely contributed by existing investors including venture capitalist Bill Tai, current BitFury board member and former VeriFone CFO Bob Dykes and Georgian Co-Investment Fund. Google Maps founder and noted software developer Lars Rasmussen also participated in the round.
BitFury founder and CEO Valery Vavilov indicated that the new funding will allow the company to complete production of its 28nm ASIC chip without selling reserve bitcoins it has mined from its three industrial-scale data centres.
Vavilov stressed in statements that the funding round, as well as the speed with which the capital was acquired, should do much to position BitFury as an industry leader in the bitcoin mining space, saying:
“Building on the success of our Series A funding, it was great to witness continued investors’ trust and excitement in BitFury. The fact that we closed this funding round in less than a week is a testament to investors’ trust in our business model and execution capabilities.”
The news notably follows KnCMiner’s $14m Series A announced in September, a figure which accounted for all of the mining sector’s third-quarter fundraising, according to the CoinDesk State of Bitcoin Q3 2014 report.
At press time, it is not clear if the fundraising is part of BitFury’s Series A round, or if this marks the start of a new round of investment for the mining hardware and services company.
Data center competition
BitFury further indicated it would use the funds to increase the capacity of its data centers to 100 megawatts, a move it suggested would allow it to maintain its competitive edge in a transaction processing market that is developing at a rapid pace.
The company first announced its ambitions for the enhanced data centre production in September, as part of its “roadmap for sustained industry leadership” which sought to chart its development path into next year. As suggested by the company at the time, the 100 megawatt goal would do much to ensure it remains a leader in the bitcoin mining space.
By comparison, competitor MegaBigPower provides bitcoin mining hardware for franchisees who, in turn, operate industrial mining centres with between 1 megawatt to 5 megawatts of power. The company, styled as a decentralized alternative to other industrial mining companies, enrolled its first franchisee in May, with the facility aiming to hit 50 megawatts of mining power.
Similarly, research from Data Center Knowledge suggests rival KnCMiner had deployed only 5 megawatts worth of mining gear as of July, and planned to only add another 5 megawatts at that time.
ASIC development update
The funding will seek to power the company’s development of what it hopes will be industry-leading ASIC chips, as well. BitFury announced in September that it is seeking to achieve energy efficiency of 0.2 J/GH by the fourth quarter of 2014, and sub-0.1 J/GH efficiency by mid-2015.
At the time, BitFury noted that it was focusing on the energy efficiency of its chips, as the metric is key for determining the cost of bitcoin transaction processing, impacting capital costs and operating expenses.
BitFury further promised that it would rely on a new execution methodology that would enable it to more rapidly deliver its chips, ensuring the products arrive at market in a timely fashion.
The chip announcement was notably followed by updates from mining hardware manufacturer CoinTerra, which on 18th September revealed it planned to issue one of the first commercial chips based on 16nm technology in the first quarter of 2015.
Images via BitFury
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Original author: Pete Rizzo