James Howells’s Final Proposal to Recover Lost Bitcoin: Buying the Landfill

james-howells’s-final-proposal-to-recover-lost-bitcoin:-buying-the-landfill

Europe|In Yearslong Search for Lost Bitcoin, a Final Proposal: Let Me Buy the Landfill

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/13/world/europe/bitcoin-wales-james-howells-landfill.html

You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

For 12 years, James Howells has begged officials to let him dig through a South Wales landfill to find a lost Bitcoin wallet that he says is worth around $800 million.

An aerial view of a coast in Wales, with an industrial site visible in the foreground.
James Howells has one final ask of the Newport City Council, which has treated him with varying degrees of seriousness throughout the years: If the council won’t let him dig up the city’s landfill, let him buy it.Credit…Dimitris Legakis/Athena Pictures, via Shutterstock

Ali Watkins

What James Howells wants to do is, by his account, simple: buy a landfill, excavate tens of thousands of tons of trash, cart every piece by dump truck to a scanner with A.I.-trained detection technology, install a backup magnetic belt to pick up any lingering metallic objects and, thus, find the long-lost hard drive that contains his mistakenly discarded bitcoin key, worth somewhere around $800 million.

“This seems logical,” Mr. Howells said of his plan.

For more than a decade, Mr. Howells has begged, negotiated and pleaded with anyone — most often, the Newport City Council, in South Wales — to get access to the mountains of waste in pursuit his crypto White Whale: a hard drive that was accidentally thrown away in 2013.

He has secured a data recovery firm and an excavator. He has enlisted the former landfill director to map out the site. He has taken the case to court, to no avail. The city has so far refused to let him excavate the landfill, and is planning to close the site for good.

Now, in what may be the final stage of his Pequodian journey, Mr. Howells has one final ask of the Newport City Council: If it won’t let him dig up the place, let him buy it.

“Seems like a better plan for me and the city,” said Mr. Howells, who envisions clearing out the trash and converting the site to a park, or perhaps making it a dump site again. “The landfill gets cleaned. I get to dig for my hard drive.”

Image

James Howells, center, with Liam McLoughlin, right, and Gwyn Jones, members of the team that helped him in his legal battle. Credit…James Howells

Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.


Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *