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Marathon signs new deal to accomplish 2023 hash rate target

  • News
  • July 19, 2022
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Bitcoin miner Marathon Digital Holdings has secured a deal to provide electricity to generate enough power to contribute 23.3 exahashes per second (EH/s) to the Bitcoin network. The Bitcoin mining firm is looking beyond its existing troubles into next year to secure the energy it needs to make up a more significant portion of the network’s hash rate.

Marathon announced on July 18 that data center operator Applied Blockchain would host 254 megawatts of power, with an option to add 70 megawatts from various other providers, including Compute North. Marathon assumes this hosting deal will help it achieve its goal of 23.3 EH/s in computer power by 2023.

Exahashes per second (EH/s) denotes the amount of hash power a miner contributes to secure the Bitcoin Network. Applied Blockchain will supply 90 megawatts to Marathon’s Texas facility and 110 to 180 megawatts to a North Dakota facility. United, they will contribute about 9.2 EH/s.

Compute North has attained the regulatory endorsement required to supply 42 megawatts of hosting capacity to Marathon at its Granbury, Texas facility. The very location will house 26,000 mining devices that will contribute about 3.6 EH/s by the end of 2022, according to Marathon.

Marathon also specified that various unnamed providers would provide up to 12 megawatts of hosting capacity worth about 0.8 EH/s, bringing the total new capacity to 324 megawatts.

Marathon CEO Fred Thiel claims that the deals should provide satisfactory hosting capacity to help his company contribute 23.3 EH/s by 2023. He expects hosting to begin in August and continue into the following year.

“The first miners to be hosted under these new arrangements are scheduled to be installed in August, with installations ramping at other locations in the fourth quarter of this year and continuing into 2023.”

Interruptions with Compute North’s regulatory compliance may have partly contributed to Marathon’s disappointing 43.08% drop in production in Q2. Hosting was expected to begin in June, but the firm did not obtain the necessary permissions.

Marathon’s concentrated productivity can also be attributed partly to its Hardin, Montana, mining facility, which was shut down after the tremendous storm on June 11. That facility signified 75% of the company’s mining power and still appears to be down as the MARA mining pool has not mined any blocks since the storm.

The new power deals come with the miners driving up energy costs for other consumers, Democrat U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren claimed. She and five other legislators asked the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Energy Department (DOE) to share their findings on the energy consumption trends of Bitcoin (BTC) miners. 

 

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