Hut 8 Mining is seeing new demand for artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing as it looks to reenergize some 6,400 rigs being moved from its inactive North Bay site in Ontario, Canada.
As previously reported, Hut 8 is in an ongoing legal battle with its third-party energy supplier Validus Power over alleged failure to meet contractual obligations. Operations at the mining facility have been suspended since November 2022.
Hut 8 declined to comment on court case proceedings in correspondence with Cointelegraph, but it confirmed that 6,400 miners are being moved to Texas as the company looks to bring its idle equipment back online.
The firm expects this specific batch of miners to be operational by the end of July 2023, providing 600 petahashes per second of operational capacity, taking Hut 8’s total installed hash rate up to 3.2 exahashes per second.
A three-month hosting agreement for the 6,400 miners from North Bay has been agreed upon, with Hut 8 planning to renew the arrangement on a month-to-month basis. Hut 8 previously moved 988 miners from North Bay to its Medicine Hat facility in Alberta, Canada, in March 2023.
Related: Riot Platforms to add 33,000 Bitcoin miners ahead of 2024 halving
Hut 8 CEO Jaime Leverton also touched on the current climate for the cryptocurrency mining ecosystem in light of tough market conditions that have prevailed for some 18 months:
AI and high-performance computing continue to grab attention and attract investment. The likes of Palo Alto-based Inflection AI raised $1.8 billion led by Microsoft and Nvidia, with part of the investment earmarked for the construction of a 22,000-strong Nvidia H100 Tensor GPU cluster.
Hut 8 has also begun deploying its infrastructure to power
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