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Bitcoin Mining in Crisis? Major Firms Abandon Crypto for AI and HPC

Published 08 November 2025
Prashant Jha
Authors
Edited by Insha Zia

Key Takeaways

  • Bitcoin miners are repurposing their data centers for AI infrastructure.
  • Firms like Core Scientific, Iris Energy, and Hut 8 are leading the pivot.
  • AI workloads can generate 25x higher revenue per MW than Bitcoin mining.

Bitcoin mining may be facing a new crisis in 2025 as the whirr of GPU clusters replaces the hum of BTC mining rigs.

What began as a quiet experiment among a few desperate miners has now turned into a full-blown industry migration — from digital gold to artificial intelligence.

As energy costs surge and halving rewards shrink, Bitcoin miners are rethinking their identity.

Instead of minting coins, they’re renting out their hardware to train large language models, serve AI inference requests, and host cloud infrastructure.

It’s not the end of mining — it’s a new kind of mining boom.

The Post-Halving Squeeze

Bitcoin’s April 2024 halving slashed rewards, sending shockwaves through an industry already struggling with soaring energy prices.

The average hashprice — daily revenue per terahash — fell from $0.12 last spring to under $0.05 by mid-2025.

For many miners, the math simply stopped working.

Electricity alone accounts for up to 90% of operating costs, and with Bitcoin price volatility eating into margins, miners began hunting for stability.

The answer came from an unlikely place: the AI revolution.

From Mining to Machine Learning

AI infrastructure doesn’t just need electricity — it devours it.

Companies like Microsoft, Google, and OpenAI are desperate for computing power, and building new data centers takes years.

Miners already have what AI needs most: vast energy contracts, cooling systems, and industrial-scale hardware ready to be repurposed.

VanEck analysts estimate that Bitcoin miners could unlock $38 billion in annual revenue by converting even a fraction of their infrastructure into AI and high-performance computing (HPC) hubs.

That’s 25 times more per megawatt than mining typically yields.

As a result, numerous public miners have raised more than $4.6 billion in debt/convertibles since late 2024 to fund growth, increasing execution risks if AI pivots fail.

The Great Mining Makeover

One by one, the industry’s biggest names are switching lanes.

Core Scientific

The Bitcoin mining giant has gone all-in, turning its 1.3 GW of capacity toward AI hosting after emerging from bankruptcy.

It recently signed a $10.2 billion contract with CoreWeave for long-term AI compute services.

Iris Energy

Iris Energy has made significant advancements in AI cloud infrastructure and has scaled its GPUs to over 4,300 units.

The firm recently pivoted from crypto mining to emphasize its focus on AI.

Iris Energy signed a $9.7 billion, five-year deal with Microsoft in November for 200MW of AI capacity at Childress, TX; the agreement includes NVIDIA GB300 GPUs and a $5.8 billion equipment purchase from Dell.

Hut8

The popular public Bitcoin mining firm launched its Highrise AI subsidiary, featuring over 1,000 NVIDIA H100/H200 GPUs.

The firm boasts a $40 million-plus investment in a GPUaaS cluster and has signed a five-year revenue-sharing deal, along with building a 600-acre Louisiana AI campus. 

MARA

The public Bitcoin miner, formerly known as Marathon Digital, is experimenting with immersion-cooled HPC sites.

It acquired 64% of Exaion for $168 million in August and currently pilots HPC sites and the MPLX JV for West Texas campuses.

Riot Platforms 

Riot Platforms, another heavyweight in the Bitcoin mining world, is also rethinking its future.

The company has paused its planned 600 MW Bitcoin mining expansion and is now exploring ways to repurpose the site for AI and high-performance computing (HPC) infrastructure instead.

Bitdeer

Bitdeer, another major player in the Bitcoin mining space, is charging full speed into the AI era.

The company is converting its 100 MW Wyoming mining operation into an AI-focused data center and has already secured an additional 285 MW site in Texas.

To handle the extreme compute demands of artificial intelligence, Bitdeer has partnered with Submer to build liquid-cooled campuses optimized for high-density GPU clusters.

Its AI cloud, powered by NVIDIA’s DGX systems, is already running at an impressive 90% utilization rate — a sign that demand for its new services is strong.

Still, the road ahead isn’t without challenges.

High capital costs — as much as $8–11 million per megawatt — combined with customer concentration risks and the technical complexity of balancing bursty AI workloads against mining’s 24/7 consistency, make this pivot a high-stakes gamble.

Traditional Bitcoin miners insist that specialization remains the safer bet.

But with valuations now favoring hybrid and AI-heavy models, it’s clear the industry is evolving into something bigger — not just miners, but digital infrastructure providers powering the next wave of computation.

Prashant Jha

Prashant Jha is a seasoned crypto journalist based in Delhi, India, with a Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Engineering. Passionate about the evolving world of blockchain and cryptocurrencies, he has been a dedicated voice in the industry since 2018. Prashant’s expertise lies in regulatory reporting, where he unravels complex legal and financial developments with clarity and precision. Before joining CCN in 2024, he honed his craft at Cointelegraph, establishing himself as a trusted name in crypto journalism.

His coverage spans major industry events, including the high-profile collapses of FTX, Three Arrows Capital (3AC), and LUNA, offering readers insightful analyses of their regulatory and market implications. Prashant’s technical background enables him to bridge the gap between intricate blockchain technology and its real-world applications, making his work accessible to novices and experts.

Beyond his professional pursuits, Prashant is an avid music enthusiast, often exploring diverse genres to unwind. A sports lover, he has a particular passion for cricket and frequently engages in discussions about the game. His multifaceted interests and sharp journalistic instincts make him a valuable contributor to CCN, where he continues shaping the crypto landscape's narrative.

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