Chinese mining hardware giant Bitmain will be bringing 56,000 of its latest Antminers to the state of Georgia in the southeastern United States.
The influx of mining rigs is part of a three-way deal between Nevada-based tech firm ISW Holdings, crypto mining datacenter Bit5ive, and Bitmain. According to ISW Holdings, the total cost of the hardware deployment will be around $62 million and is expected to generate monthly revenue of $10 million when running at full capacity.
ISW Holdings has already parted with $6 million towards the purchase that will see Bitmain's Antminer S19J mining rigs deployed under its new BlockQuarry brand using Bit5ive’s infrastructure. Bitmain reportedly suspended orders of new miners in June amid a booming secondhand market.
When fully operational in October 2022, the new miners will consume up to 200 megawatts of electricity at a BlockQuarry facility called "POD-CITY" in Georgia. ISW expects the first 20 MW of power to be running by October, according to the announcement.
Alonzo Pierce, president and chairman of ISW Holdings, said that the nature of the business has changed since it partnered with Bit5ive last year and began designing “state-of-the-art mining pods,” adding:
“Looking ahead, our hosting service revenues will be stable and substantial, and capable of strong growth. And our mining revenues will fluctuate with prices in the cryptocurrency space.”
Bit5ive will manufacture “BLOQPODS” which will be grouped into "BLOQPARKS" operated by BlockQuarry. Each pod comprises 280 Bitmain Antminers to produce a hash rate of 28,000 terahashes per second (TH/s).
ISW Holdings already operates 700 miners comprising Bitmain Antminer S17s, S19s, and Canaan Avalons at a Bit5ive managed site in Pennsylvania.
Related: Bitcoin hashrate triples since June 28 in recovery from China syndrome
Bitcoin’s hash rate has recovered to 133 EH/s from its late June slump to 68 EH/s following the great miner migration from China. On-chain analytics provider, Glassnode, reported on Sept. 6 that miners had started taking profits, adding:
“The increase in hash-rate is likely a combination of previously obsolete hardware finding a second lease on life, and miners in China successfully relocating, re-establishing or re-homing their hardware and operations,”