Paraguay to Provide Land for ‘Golden Goose’ Mining Project

Paraguay to Provide Land for ‘Golden Goose’ Mining Project

Paraguay’s vice president has declared support for the “Golden Goose” project, which will see South Korea’s Blockchain Technology Foundation build five mining centers on state land. The foundation also plans to conduct what it describes as an “initial exchange offering” to facilitate investor participation in the project.

South Korean Group to Build Mining Centers

A 15-year contract ensuring stable electricity pricing from the power plant has been included, as has the installation of requisite high-speed internet infrastructure and tax concessions. Choi Yong-Kwan, chairman of the Commons Foundation, claimed that only 10 to 20 percent of the electricity produced by the Itaipu dam is actually consumed in Paraguay. “We will build the world’s largest mining center in Paraguay using low-cost and abundant clean energy,” Choi claimed.

Commons Foundation Plans ‘Initial Exchange Offering’

A recent press release announced that the project will facilitate investor participation through what the the foundation calls an “initial exchange offering.” The offering will support participation in the form of BTC, ETH and an altcoin that the Commons Foundation “contributes to” called microbitcoin.

The Commons Foundation claims that Golden Goose token holders will be paid 30 percent of mining profits and 70 percent of exchange profits “on a daily basis.” However, profits will be exclusively paid out in microbitcoin.

Despite the obscure structure of the planned offering, the project appears to have full support from Paraguay’s government. Hugo Velázquez Moreno, the vice president of Paraguay, has stated that “the Paraguay government will actively support the Commons Foundation’s Golden Goose project and provide tax breaks through constitutional revisions.”

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