After 10 years, James Howells has ended his search for a hard drive he tossed in 2013 with 8,000 Bitcoin—now worth $950 million and possibly $8 billion by 2030.
James Howells Abandons Decade-Long Search for Hard Drive with 8,000 Bitcoin—A Lost Fortune in Landfill
After ten years of relentless searching, James Howells—known worldwide as the man who accidentally threw away a hard drive containing 8,000 Bitcoin—has finally ended his quest. What started as a simple mistake in 2013 has become one of the most famous stories of lost cryptocurrency in history, transforming a routine trip to the dump into a saga of lost opportunity, obsession, and heartbreak.
In 2013, the Newport, Wales native mistakenly disposed of a hard drive that, at the time, contained Bitcoin worth only a fraction of today’s values. As cryptocurrency prices soared over the last decade, the hard drive’s hypothetical value skyrocketed to about $950 million as of 2024. Some experts even estimate that those 8,000 Bitcoins could be worth as much as $8 billion by 2030 if growth continues.
Howells, an IT engineer, spent years petitioning the Newport City Council for permission to search the landfill where the drive is believed to be buried. Over the years, he proposed using funding from investors, high-tech robots, and even offered to share part of the recovered fortune with the city and local charities. Despite these efforts, local authorities repeatedly denied permission, citing environmental concerns and the sheer impossibility of combing through millions of tons of trash.
Earlier in 2024, Howells announced he would finally end his search, acknowledging the emotional and financial toll the mission had taken. “It’s been a long journey filled with hope, frustration, and disappointment. I gave it everything I had, but at some point you have to accept reality and move on,” Howells told local media.
His story continues to fascinate and serve as a cautionary tale for the growing global crypto community. The ‘hidden’ hard drive—potentially the world’s most valuable piece of e-waste—remains lost somewhere beneath the soil of a South Wales landfill. For Howells, life goes on, but the lessons about digital wealth and the consequences of even the simplest mistakes will endure for generations.