![A dump where a computer engineer accidentally threw away his ??600million bitcoin fortune is set to close.. Father-of-three James Howells, 39, lost the 8,000 bitcoins when his partner threw out a black bag containing old computer parts - including the hard drive where it was stored. Since then the value of the bitcoins has rocketed - and is now worth around ??620million. James launched a legal bid for permission to search the council-owned dump but his case was thrown out by a judge last month. Newport City Council now says the refuse site is coming to the end of its lifespan and will close in the next two years. Pictured here is James Howells WALES NEWS SERVICE](https://usercontent.one/wp/www.businessmayor.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/Man-wants-to-buy-tip-where-he-thinks-his-lost.jpg?media=1711454622)
A man who accidentally binned a hard drive containing 8,000 Bitcoin tokens more than a decade ago is hoping to buy the tip where he lost his fortune.
An estimated £620,000,000 is sitting on the hard drive in the Newport Dock’s Way tip after James Howells’ partner mistakenly threw it out during a spring clean in 2013.
It was recently announced the tip will be closed in 2025, with a new solar farm expected to be installed on the land.
But Howells has said that Newport Council has backed down on what it previously cited as a reason for not allowing him to search the tip.
He said: ‘The council planning on closing the landfill so soon is quite a surprise, especially since it claimed at the High Court that closing the landfill to allow me to search would have a huge detrimental impact on the people of Newport, whilst at the same time they were planning to close the landfill anyway.
‘I would be potentially interested in purchasing the landfill site,’ he added. ‘I have discussed this option recently with investment partners and it is very much on the table.’
![A dump where a computer engineer accidentally threw away his ??600million bitcoin fortune is set to close.. Father-of-three James Howells, 39, lost the 8,000 bitcoins when his partner threw out a black bag containing old computer parts - including the hard drive where it was stored. Since then the value of the bitcoins has rocketed - and is now worth around ??620million. James launched a legal bid for permission to search the council-owned dump but his case was thrown out by a judge last month. Newport City Council now says the refuse site is coming to the end of its lifespan and will close in the next two years. Pictured here is James Howells during the court case WALES NEWS SERVICE](https://usercontent.one/wp/www.businessmayor.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/1739222127_965_Man-wants-to-buy-tip-where-he-thinks-his-lost.jpg?media=1711454622)
Mr Howells mined the 8,000 Bitcoin in 2009 at almost no cost to himself. He forgot about it, storing it in a black bin bag, until its value surged to £9 million several months later.
By then it was long gone. The hard drive is now buried somewhere among 350,000 tonnes of rubbish at Newport Household Waste Recycling Centre in South Wales.
Despite offering to pay the council £10 million if it is recovered, the council says finding it is unlikely, would harm the environment and could cost millions of pounds, with no guarantee of that money being reimbursed.
![FILE PICTURE - GV of the Newport recyling and waste tip where James Howells believes the hard drive contain the password to his crypto account is located. Newport, Wales. Photo released January 15 2025. A man who threw away ??600m worth of Bitcoin with the trash has accepted for the first time it is 'game over' - after a judge threw out his bid to dig it up.James Howells has described his lost legal bid to recover the fortune as 'gut-wrenching' and said he will spend the rest of his life wondering what might have been.The 39-year-old launched had launched court action against a council that refused to let him excavate computer equipment needed to unlock his 8,000 Bitcoins - currently worth more than ??635M. The costly error a decade ago saw his then partner throw away a black bin bag containing the drive he needed to gain access to his stash.](https://usercontent.one/wp/www.businessmayor.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/1739222127_70_Man-wants-to-buy-tip-where-he-thinks-his-lost.jpg?media=1711454622)
Reacting to the decision to strike out his case, Mr Howells said: ‘The case being struck out at the earliest hearing doesn’t even give me the opportunity to explain myself or an opportunity for justice in any shape or form.
‘There was so much more that could have been explained in a full trial and that’s what I was expecting.’
James Goudie KC, representing the council, said Mr Howells had forfeited ownership of the hard drive when it entered the landfill.
He also said environmental regulations mean it can’t excavate the site without violating its permits.
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