I thought unless you are a huge miner it is something you kind've skip over, I don't think the tax agencies are concerned about crypto until it is a lot of fiat you are exchanging from it.
The site I'm on has a 630kva (400Kw continuous power draw at 80%) transformer with line capacity to support four more. So i am aiming for 2MW within a three year period. There is no way of hiding something like that even if I wanted to.
If I register as a company and show some profits for a certain period of time I can get a loan on the company rather than my person. And I would have something to show investors if I want funding that way.
I guess I could just register as a data center, but then I would have to explain how it is that I don't have any customers. That I "produce" a digital unit that I can sell on an internet exchange in a foreign country. This will probably not be much of a problem, but it wouldn't hurt if I and the authorities agree that this really falls within that category before I register. However, if I could register as an
"industrial producer of the commodity bitcoin" I would pay 2 cents per KW less on my electricity. And in bitcoin mining that matters.
Ideally they would just give a well founded answer back to me, but that's not what they've done. So I will have to argue my case more fully and preferably show how it's done in other countries and why. Ideally I could just point to KnCMiner as they are also a scandinavian company, but they are primarily a chip and HW producer. If anyone has any suggestions on companies who's fully registered and only does mining (no hosting, no data center services, no chip/HW manufacturing) then info on those would maybe give me something to work with.