Tenerife Bitcoin held by the island council will be sold after officials found a regulated Spanish buyer, converting a small research holding into cash for local science.
The council says the proceeds will support ITER projects and quantum technology development near Granadilla de Abona.
Local authorities say the coins were bought as part of a blockchain research effort, not as an investment. In 2012 the institute purchased a small lot to study distributed ledgers; today that experiment has grown into a material asset.
In this context, the council confirmed the sale will proceed only through a regulated intermediary. The holding, originally acquired by the research centre, is being monetised to fund targeted research and avoid custody or compliance gaps.
The record shows 97 bitcoin were bought in 2012 for €10,000 (≈ $11,500). However, market appreciation has pushed the position’s value to nearly €10 million, according to reporting on Nov 6, 2025 by Coindesk Nov 6, 2025.
That said, earlier attempts to place the coins with banks were unsuccessful. Consequently, ITER and municipal officials are negotiating with a Spanish financial entity authorised by the Bank of Spain and CNMV to execute the transfer lawfully.
Officials state the sale proceeds will be channelled to the research centre to back applied projects. Specifically, funds are earmarked to support Instituto Tecnolf3gico y de Energedas Renovables (ITER) initiatives, including quantum technology work at Granadilla de Abona.
Moreover, the council frames the transfer as a way to convert a oneadoff study into sustainable research funding. As a result, ITER expects to prioritise projects that strengthen renewable energy and advanced-computing capabilities on the island.
The sale requires a regulated Spanish financial entity approved by Bank of Spain and CNMV to complete the transfer legally and transparently. For regulator information see the CNMV official site: CNMV.


