Crypto
Cedar Falls delays public hearing on crypto mining operation, power plant
CEDAR FALLS, Iowa (KCRG) – Cedar Falls city officials postponed a public hearing on zoning and code changes needed for a proposed power plant and cryptocurrency mining operation.
The hearing was pushed back to April 22 amid concerns from residents about environmental impacts and utility costs.
Cedar Falls Utility and Simple Mining, the company behind the cryptocurrency operation, say their projects will not negatively impact the public or the environment. Residents at Tuesday night’s meeting showed skepticism about those claims.
People are concerned about noise levels and water and electricity usage. Simple Mining says its crypto mining will use a closed loop water cooling system, which will allow the operation to use very little water. The company also says it can be shut down quickly when energy rates are higher.
Matt Hein, Simple Mining Director of Energy Infrastructure, said the company’s energy usage is a benefit to Cedar Falls.
“Our large consumption of electricity is an economic benefit to the city of Cedar Falls,” Hein said. “We help pay for schools, we help pay for roads.”
People worry high energy usage will push their utility bills up.
Cedar Falls Utility says the power plant was planned for years before the crypto operation became part of the picture.
Copyright 2026 KCRG. All rights reserved.
Crypto
Bitcoin Drops Below $80K as Iran Rejects Trump Deal and Traders Dump $91M in Longs
Key Takeaways
- Bitcoin fell below $80,000 on May 7, erasing weekly gains after hitting a high of $82,833.
- Volatility triggered $270 million in liquidations and pulled the crypto market cap to $2.74 trillion.
- Concerns mount that President Trump may pivot to a hot war as Tehran rejects the latest U.S. proposal.
The Iran Peace Deal Factor
On May 7, bitcoin reversed course, dipping below $80,000 to effectively erase gains made since Monday. As shown by the daily chart, the top cryptocurrency—which reached a multi-month high of $82,833 some 24 hours earlier—had been under pressure from bears since Wednesday afternoon.
After losing $1,000 during a slow descent from midday to midnight, bitcoin found temporary support at $80,700. While a pre-dawn rally lifted the price to $81,600, the momentum proved unsustainable. The subsequent sell-off was more aggressive, forcing the asset down to a $79,500 intraday low. As of 1 p.m. EDT, bitcoin has reclaimed some ground, currently hovering just below the $80,000 mark.
Bitcoin’s nearly 2% drop dragged its market capitalization below the $1.6 trillion mark, a marked decline from the approximately $1.66 trillion intraday peak reached on Wednesday. The drop helped pull the crypto economy’s market cap to $2.74 trillion, down from just over $2.8 trillion.
The cryptocurrency market’s retreat, which mirrored Wall Street’s, coincided with reports that Iran had rejected the Trump administration’s proposal to end the war. According to a post on X by Walter Bloomberg, a senior Iranian official, Mohsen Rezaei, said Tehran rejected the proposal—which calls on Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz—because it does not include reparations for war damage.
Iran’s rejection of the U.S. proposal neutralized the optimism sparked by earlier Axios reports that a deal was imminent. Concerns are mounting that a prolonged diplomatic stalemate will embolden Washington hawks, potentially sidelining proponents of diplomacy and nudging President Trump toward a direct military confrontation.
Despite the plunge, bitcoin was at the time of writing still up nearly 5% since the beginning of the month and more than 15% over a 30-day period. Meanwhile, bitcoin’s volatility over the 24-hour period saw $91 million in overleveraged long positions wiped out, compared with $12 million in shorts. Overall, the crypto economy saw nearly $270 million in long bets liquidated versus $90 million in shorts.
Crypto
Bermuda Moves to Next Phase of On-Chain Economy Initiative | PYMNTS.com
Bermuda is accelerating its effort to make stablecoins a part of everyday commerce, Bermuda Premier David Burt said Wednesday (May 6).
Crypto
Babylon and Gomining Plan to Activate Up to 1,000 BTC via Trustless Vaults
Key Takeaways:
- Babylon and Gomining announced a Trustless Bitcoin Vault (TBV) integration for up to 1,000 BTC.
- BTC holders earn Gomining mining rewards via Babylon’s vaults without bridging, wrapping, or custody loss.
- Babylon holds 56,853 BTC in staking vaults and raised $15M from a16z crypto in January 2026.
How the Integration Works
Bitcoin owners will be able to lock their BTC into Babylon’s Trustless Bitcoin Vaults (TBV), a mechanism that holds bitcoin on its native blockchain under programmatic rules, without moving it off the Bitcoin network. From there, users can programmatically borrow and self-commit those locked funds to Gomining’s mining products, earning rewards from Gomining’s industrial-scale operations in the form of native bitcoin yield.
The key distinction, per the official announcement, is that users never wrap their BTC into a synthetic token, never bridge it to another chain, and never hand custody to a third party. The bitcoin remains onchain on the network throughout, with vault rules enforced at the protocol level rather than by a centralized operator.
David Tse, co-founder of Babylon, said the integration “extends the reach and adoption of TBV within a Bitcoin-aligned ecosystem,” while Mark Zalan, CEO of Gomining, added that the partnership “extends infrastructure to Bitcoin holders who refuse to compromise on self-custody.”
The initial rollout targets up to 1,000 BTC, approximately $82 million at current prices, committed through the aforementioned vault system.
Why It Matters for Bitcoin DeFi
The persistent challenge in Bitcoin decentralized finance ( DeFi) has been generating yield on BTC without compromising the properties that make it valuable, i.e. self-custody, onchain transparency, and censorship resistance. Wrapped bitcoin solutions, such as WBTC, require trusting a centralized custodian, and cross-chain bridges have repeatedly proven to be attack vectors, accounting for billions in losses across the broader crypto industry.
Babylon has been building around this constraint since its founding. Its staking protocol already holds 56,853 BTC in staking vaults, approximately $5.64 billion at current prices, making it the largest Bitcoin staking protocol by total value locked. The firm raised $15 million from a16z crypto in January 2026 to develop Bitcoin collateral infrastructure.
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