Reabold Resources, a London-based gas-investment firm, is exploring a controversial pivot into bitcoin mining — proposing a small, gas-powered pilot data centre at its West Newton site in northern England. The company says the pilot would run off gas from the West Newton A well site to demonstrate how on-site fuel can power data-centre developments that it calls “crucial to the future U.K. economy.” Reabold’s co-CEO Sachin Oza told media the plan would “help fund the further development of the gas field and prove the concept,” and could act as a stepping stone to a larger data-centre operation. Reabold holds a drilling licence from the Environment Agency for the site. The proposal has drawn criticism after a Telegraph report suggested the West Newton field is so large it could theoretically power the creation of 50,000 bitcoins, and warned the project comes at a sensitive time amid geopolitical tensions involving Iran, the U.S. and Israel. Critics raised concerns that diverting gas to mining could exacerbate supply worries. The U.K. government pushed back on those supply fears in a late-March statement, saying such concerns are “unfounded” and noting that only about 1% of the U.K.’s gas supply in 2025 came from Qatar, with no reason to expect a significant change in 2026. Reabold also stressed that the onshore resource at West Newton “has and will continue to be progressed for the benefit of U.K. energy security,” particularly given current geopolitical uncertainty. Reabold’s move highlights a broader shift in the mining industry. Many crypto-mining firms are diversifying away from pure bitcoin hash-rate generation into high-performance computing and data-centre services that can support uses such as AI workloads — a transition that Reabold says its pilot could foreshadow. Whether Reabold’s plan progresses beyond a pilot will depend on regulatory approvals, community response and how the company balances energy security concerns with the economics of gas-powered data centres. The proposal has placed the firm at the centre of an unfolding debate over energy, crypto mining and the future role of onshore gas in the U.K. economy. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news