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OneMiners Unlocks Global Mining Through Strategic Hosting Locations

OneMiners Unlocks Global Mining Through Strategic Hosting Locations

2,060 MW
Global Capacity
21
Locations
5
Continents
$0.033
Lowest Rate/kWh

Executive Summary

  • OneMiners operates 21 Bitcoin mining hosting facilities across 5 continents, totalling 2,060 MW of installed capacity — one of the largest privately-operated ASIC hosting networks on the planet.
  • Electricity rates across the OneMiners network range from $0.033/kWh (Inner Mongolia, China) to $0.075/kWh (Prague, Czechia; Miami, Florida) — with the majority of capacity priced below $0.060/kWh.
  • All major facilities are backed by 7-year fixed electricity contracts, eliminating energy price volatility for the duration of a miner's hosting term.
  • Uptime SLAs range from 97% to 99%, with compensation provisions at facilities carrying a 98%+ guarantee — a contractual commitment that most operators do not offer at all.
  • Geographic diversification across Africa, the Middle East, the Americas, Europe, and Asia protects hosted miners against regulatory, geopolitical, grid, and climate risks simultaneously.
  • AI-powered fleet management is active across all OneMiners facilities, delivering efficiency improvements of 6–115% above baseline ASIC performance.

Why Geography Has Become a Competitive Variable in Bitcoin Mining

Five years ago, the geography of a Bitcoin mining operation was primarily a tax and regulatory question. Miners wanted jurisdictions that would not confiscate their hardware, would not tax their rewards at punitive rates, and would not shut them down on 48 hours' notice. Beyond that, location was an afterthought. If the electricity was cheap enough and the government sufficiently indifferent, you built there.

That calculus has changed fundamentally. In 2026, geographic strategy in Bitcoin mining is no longer about avoiding problems — it is about capturing systematic advantages across five distinct risk and opportunity dimensions.

Geopolitical Risk

The history of Bitcoin mining is littered with regulatory shocks. China's 2021 ban eliminated an estimated 65–70% of global hashrate overnight. Mining operations in Kazakhstan experienced regulatory turbulence that forced rapid relocations. European jurisdictions have oscillated between openness and skepticism. Even in the United States, state-level policy differences are significant enough that Texas, New York, and Florida represent materially different regulatory environments.

A miner with all of their ASICs in a single jurisdiction is carrying concentrated geopolitical risk. A power bill that is one regulation change away from becoming confiscation is not a stable business model. Geographic diversification — real diversification, not token geographic presence — is the only structural hedge against this risk.

Grid Risk

National and regional power grids are more fragile than their operators publicly acknowledge. Winter Storm Uri in Texas in February 2021 took the ERCOT grid to within four minutes and fourteen seconds of a months-long total failure, according to the Texas grid operator's own post-event report. Hurricane-related outages in the southeastern United States, flooding-related grid disruption in parts of Asia, and aging infrastructure across much of Europe all represent real operational risks for mining facilities.

A mining operation whose entire capacity sits on one grid is fully exposed to that grid's worst-case scenario. Multi-continent geographic distribution means that no single grid event can take down more than a fraction of total capacity.

Climate Risk

Cooling is one of the largest operational cost variables in Bitcoin mining, and climate drives cooling costs. A facility in Lagos, Nigeria, at 25–32°C ambient temperatures year-round, requires different cooling infrastructure than a facility in Oslo, Norway, at −5°C to 20°C. A facility in Dubai, UAE, in July faces cooling loads that a facility in Helsinki, Finland, never encounters.

The strategic implication is not that hot climates are bad — it is that climate diversity across a portfolio of facilities creates operational flexibility. Miners can be routed to cooler facilities during summer peaks, reducing cooling overhead. Heat recovery systems in Nordic facilities turn thermal waste into an economic asset. Arctic ambient air temperatures allow high-density deployments that would require active cooling systems in warmer climates.

Energy Price Risk

Electricity markets are not static. Spot prices, wholesale contracts, and even long-term agreements can be renegotiated or repriced at renewal. A miner locked into a facility with a market-rate electricity contract faces exposure to energy price inflation — which is precisely the kind of cost inflation that can turn a profitable operation unprofitable across a Bitcoin bear market.

The OneMiners approach to this risk is the 7-year fixed electricity contract model: energy pricing is locked at contract inception for the full hosting term. No repricing. No market-rate exposure. The kWh rate you see on day one is the kWh rate on day 2,555. In an environment where energy markets are volatile and mining margins are sensitive to energy costs, this is not a minor feature — it is the foundation of a viable long-term business case.

Currency and Regulatory Risk

Mining operations that are concentrated in a single currency zone also face currency risk. A hosting operator whose costs are denominated in a currency that appreciates against the US dollar (in which Bitcoin is priced) experiences margin compression regardless of BTC price movements. Geographic diversification across multiple currency zones provides a natural hedge against this exposure.


The Case for Global Diversification

The argument for geographic diversification in Bitcoin mining is not theoretical. It is quantifiable.

Consider two operators running identical hardware — the same ASICs, the same hashrate, the same Bitcoin price environment. Operator A has all capacity in a single facility in a single country. Operator B distributes capacity across 5 facilities in 5 different regions. Both face the same market risks. But their operational risk profiles are completely different.

When Operator A's jurisdiction introduces restrictive regulations, 100% of their capacity is affected. When Operator A's grid goes down, 100% of their revenue goes to zero. When Operator A's electricity contract comes up for renewal in a high-price environment, they negotiate from a position of zero alternatives.

Operator B's regulatory event affects at most 20% of capacity. Their grid event affects at most 20% of revenue. When any single electricity contract renews, 80% of their capacity is operational and generating revenue — which means they negotiate from a position of strength, not desperation.

This is the structural logic behind the OneMiners global network. The 21-location footprint is not a marketing asset. It is an operational risk management architecture that benefits every miner hosted within it.


How OneMiners Built Its Global Network

The OneMiners global infrastructure did not emerge from opportunistic site-by-site acquisition. It was built according to a deliberate framework that prioritises five criteria above all others.

1. Energy Economics First

Every OneMiners site selection begins with energy economics. What is the wholesale or industrial electricity rate available at this location? Is it achievable under a long-term fixed contract? Is the power source reliable enough to underwrite a 97%+ uptime SLA? These questions are answered before any physical infrastructure investment is made.

The result is a network where the overwhelming majority of capacity — approximately 1,600 MW out of 2,060 MW total — is priced below $0.060/kWh. The most competitive sites (Inner Mongolia at $0.033/kWh, Asunción at $0.035/kWh, Lagos at $0.040/kWh) anchor the economics of the entire network, providing a cost floor that is difficult for single-site operators to access.

2. Regulatory Due Diligence

Every jurisdiction in the OneMiners network has been assessed for regulatory clarity, political stability, and the legal framework governing cryptocurrency operations. This is not a one-time exercise — it is an ongoing monitoring function. Regulatory landscapes change, and OneMiners' multi-site model allows the company to increase or decrease utilisation at specific locations in response to regulatory developments without disrupting clients.

3. Climate and Cooling Engineering

Each site's climate profile determines its cooling architecture. Nordic facilities (Helsinki, Oslo) leverage ambient air cooling and heat recovery systems that would be impossible in equatorial locations. Equatorial facilities (Lagos, Nairobi) use engineered airflow and evaporative cooling systems optimised for year-round high ambient temperatures. Middle Eastern facilities (Dubai, Riyadh) incorporate redundant active cooling capable of operating in extreme summer heat.

4. Grid Redundancy

No OneMiners facility is connected to a single power source without backup. Primary grid connections are supplemented with diesel generation capacity, battery backup systems, and in some cases renewable energy integration (solar in Nigeria, wind in Kansas and Finland). Grid redundancy is a prerequisite for the uptime SLAs that OneMiners guarantees.

5. The 7-Year Fixed Electricity Contract Model

The fixed electricity contract is not just a client-facing feature — it is a fundamental requirement of the OneMiners site development model. OneMiners negotiates long-term energy supply agreements with local utilities and energy suppliers before committing capital to facility construction. This locks in the energy economics of each site and enables the company to offer fixed-rate hosting contracts to clients with full confidence that the underlying energy cost is protected.

Seven years is the standard contract term. In an industry where most hosting agreements are 12–24 months, a 7-year fixed contract is an institutional-grade product. It requires institutional-grade counterparties and institutional-grade energy procurement. This is exactly what OneMiners has built.


Continent-by-Continent: The Full Network

Africa

Lagos, Nigeria — 300 MW | $0.040/kWh | 98% SLA

Africa is the new frontier for large-scale Bitcoin mining, and Lagos is its most important node. Nigeria has the largest economy in Africa by nominal GDP, a young and rapidly growing population, and energy infrastructure that includes both national grid access and significant solar generation capacity. The OneMiners Lagos facility draws on a combination of grid power and co-located solar generation to deliver a blended electricity rate of $0.040/kWh — among the lowest available anywhere in the world under a fixed long-term contract.

At 300 MW, Lagos is OneMiners' single largest facility. It is also the highest-capacity facility available to retail and institutional mining clients in sub-Saharan Africa. The 98% uptime SLA is backed by grid redundancy and diesel backup generation. Direct bank payouts in USD are available to all hosted clients via ACH, SEPA, and SWIFT.

For miners evaluating the electricity cost dimension of their ROI, Lagos represents a compelling anchor. Verify the numbers yourself at asicprofit.com using a $0.040/kWh input — the margin differential versus a $0.080/kWh facility is significant at any Bitcoin price above $60,000.

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia — 200 MW | $0.055/kWh | 98% SLA

Ethiopia's electricity grid is fed predominantly by hydropower, centred on the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam — the largest hydroelectric facility in Africa. This creates a renewable energy advantage that is increasingly relevant for institutional miners with ESG mandates. The Addis Ababa facility runs on effectively carbon-free electricity at $0.055/kWh under a fixed long-term contract.

The Ethiopian government has been broadly supportive of cryptocurrency mining as a foreign investment and foreign exchange earner, providing a favourable regulatory environment. At 200 MW, the Addis Ababa facility is OneMiners' second-largest globally and its flagship renewable energy site.

Nairobi, Kenya — 40 MW | $0.052/kWh | 97% SLA

Kenya operates one of the most geothermal-intensive electricity grids in the world, with geothermal sources accounting for over 45% of national generation capacity. The Nairobi facility is powered primarily by this geothermal electricity at $0.052/kWh — another renewable energy option for ESG-focused institutional clients. At 40 MW, it is a smaller facility optimised for mid-scale deployments and geographic diversification within Africa.


Middle East

Dubai, UAE — 120 MW | $0.065/kWh | 99% SLA

Dubai occupies a unique position in the global mining landscape: it is the highest-uptime facility in the OneMiners network (99% SLA), it operates in a zero-tax jurisdiction with no capital gains tax and no corporate tax on mining income, and it provides access to the Gulf's rapidly developing financial infrastructure.

The electricity rate of $0.065/kWh is not the cheapest in the network, but the combination of regulatory clarity, tax efficiency, zero withholding on payouts, and 99% uptime SLA makes Dubai the preferred location for clients where compliance, legal certainty, and institutional presentation matter as much as the raw electricity cost. Miners who need to report to institutional LPs, operate through corporate structures, or maintain clean regulatory standing often allocate to Dubai specifically.

At 120 MW, the Dubai facility is also one of the largest mining hosting sites in the Middle East, providing substantial capacity for large institutional deployments.

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia — 60 MW | $0.048/kWh | 98% SLA

Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 strategy has driven significant investment in electricity infrastructure, including renewable energy, as the kingdom works to diversify its economy away from oil export dependence. The energy surplus from this investment has created industrial electricity rates that are competitive with some of the lowest globally. The Riyadh facility accesses grid and solar power at $0.048/kWh — placing it in the lower tier of the OneMiners network for energy cost.


Americas

Houston, Texas — 150 MW | $0.058/kWh | 98% SLA

Texas operates the largest deregulated electricity market in the United States through ERCOT (Electric Reliability Council of Texas). Deregulation creates opportunities for large industrial power consumers — including Bitcoin mining operations — to access wholesale electricity prices, demand response programmes, and flexible power purchase agreements that are unavailable in regulated markets.

The OneMiners Houston facility accesses ERCOT wholesale power with a wind energy component, achieving a blended rate of $0.058/kWh under a fixed long-term contract. At 150 MW, it is the largest US facility in the network and the primary US capacity centre. Houston's position as an energy industry hub also provides access to industrial electrical infrastructure, qualified maintenance technicians, and grid redundancy that is not available in all US locations.

Dallas, Texas — 100 MW | $0.062/kWh | 98% SLA

The Dallas facility provides redundancy within Texas — a critically important feature given the history of ERCOT grid stress events. Distributing capacity between Houston and Dallas means that a localised grid event in either location affects only a portion of Texas-based capacity. At $0.062/kWh, the Dallas rate is slightly above Houston but still highly competitive in the US context.

Wichita, Kansas — 80 MW | $0.055/kWh | 98% SLA

Kansas generates more wind energy per capita than any other US state, and Wichita sits in the heart of the state's wind energy infrastructure. The OneMiners Wichita facility accesses this surplus wind generation at $0.055/kWh — below the Texas rate and competitive with many international locations. Wind energy surplus in the Plains states has created industrial electricity pricing that is among the most competitive in North America. Verify the current ROI calculations at asicprofit.com — the Kansas rate frequently outperforms Texas on a net profitability basis.

Brooklyn, New York — 45 MW | $0.072/kWh | 99% SLA

Brooklyn is OneMiners' physical headquarters and the location of one of its two retail mining showrooms (alongside Miami). The electricity rate of $0.072/kWh reflects New York's premium grid pricing, but the Brooklyn facility is not selected for energy economics — it is selected for proximity, institutional presence, and the operational significance of having a flagship facility in the world's financial capital.

The 99% uptime SLA reflects the premium infrastructure of the facility. For clients who want to visit their hardware in person, meet the operations team, or conduct due diligence on OneMiners facilities directly, Brooklyn is the primary point of contact. The physical showroom at the Brooklyn location is open for walk-in consultations.

Atlanta, Georgia — 65 MW | $0.060/kWh | 98% SLA

Atlanta has emerged as one of the most significant data centre hubs in the United States, driven by favourable business climate, competitive electricity rates, and strong fibre connectivity. The OneMiners Atlanta facility benefits from this infrastructure maturity at $0.060/kWh — a competitive rate within the US Southeast. At 65 MW, it provides capacity for mid-to-large deployments seeking US-based hosting at below-average domestic electricity costs.

Charleston, South Carolina — 70 MW | $0.058/kWh | 98% SLA

Charleston provides Atlantic seaboard geographic diversification within the US. If Texas facilities face grid stress, if Atlanta faces regional weather events, Charleston continues operating. At $0.058/kWh — matching the Houston rate — Charleston is one of the better-priced US facilities in the network. The 70 MW capacity makes it suitable for large-scale deployments.

Miami, Florida — 35 MW | $0.075/kWh | 99% SLA

Miami is the second physical OneMiners showroom, alongside Brooklyn. Like Brooklyn, it carries a premium electricity rate reflecting its metropolitan location and premium infrastructure positioning. The Miami facility and showroom serve the South Florida, Latin American, and Caribbean client base. Clients in LATAM who want physical access to a North American OneMiners facility without the cost of a New York visit typically use Miami as their primary point of contact.

Asunción, Paraguay — 85 MW | $0.035/kWh | 97% SLA

Paraguay's Itaipu Dam is one of the two largest hydroelectric power stations in the world by annual energy production. It generates far more electricity than Paraguay can domestically consume, which has created some of the lowest industrial electricity rates in the Western Hemisphere. The OneMiners Asunción facility accesses Itaipu-powered electricity at $0.035/kWh — the lowest rate in the Americas within the network.

For miners calculating returns at asicprofit.com, the $0.035/kWh input for Paraguay produces results that frequently surprise first-time users — the margin differential versus $0.070/kWh US residential power is substantial enough to fundamentally change the profitability case for hardware that appears marginal in high-cost-electricity environments.

São Paulo, Brazil — 70 MW | $0.050/kWh | 97% SLA

Brazil is a major mining jurisdiction by global hashrate, and São Paulo serves as the hub for OneMiners' South American operations outside Paraguay. Hydro and wind power bring the rate to $0.050/kWh. The São Paulo facility is the primary point of service for Brazilian clients and those in the broader LATAM market who want closer geographic proximity to their hosted hardware.

Toronto, Canada — 65 MW | $0.062/kWh | 98% SLA

Canada provides regulatory certainty that is difficult to match in most global mining jurisdictions. Canadian cryptocurrency regulation is clear, stable, and well-established. Ontario's hydropower grid delivers electricity at $0.062/kWh — competitive for North America — and the regulatory framework gives institutional clients confidence that their mining operations will not face sudden legal disruption. For miners with institutional LPs or compliance requirements that favour G7-country hosting, Toronto is frequently the preferred option.


Europe

Helsinki, Finland — 90 MW | $0.068/kWh | 99% SLA

Finland's Arctic geography is an asset for Bitcoin mining that is not always immediately obvious. Average annual temperatures in Helsinki range from −6°C to 22°C — which means that the passive ambient air cooling available for free in Finland requires expensive active cooling systems in warmer climates. This dramatically reduces the cooling component of operational costs, and in winter months allows high-density ASIC deployments without any active cooling at all.

The OneMiners Helsinki facility has been engineered with heat recovery systems that capture thermal output from the ASICs and convert it into usable heating energy — reducing the facility's net energy cost and providing a basis for potential carbon offset accounting. At 90 MW and $0.068/kWh, Helsinki is the most expensive Nordic location in the network but the most infrastructure-intensive, with 99% uptime SLA and premium connectivity.

For clients interested in the sustainability narrative — increasingly important for institutional capital — Finland's electricity mix (approximately 75% renewable by national grid average) provides one of the cleanest energy profiles in the OneMiners network. Understanding the environmental accounting of Bitcoin mining, including energy mix considerations, is covered in depth at btcfq.com.

Oslo, Norway — 120 MW | $0.045/kWh | 99% SLA

Norway generates approximately 90% of its electricity from hydropower. This creates one of the cleanest, most stable, and most competitively-priced electricity grids in Europe. The OneMiners Oslo facility accesses this hydropower at $0.045/kWh — the cheapest electricity rate available in Europe within the network — with a 99% uptime SLA reflecting the exceptional reliability of the Norwegian grid.

At 120 MW, Oslo is the largest European facility and the primary European capacity centre for OneMiners. For miners who need European hosting for regulatory, tax, or client-facing reasons, Oslo provides a compelling combination of the lowest regional electricity cost, 100% renewable energy sourcing, and the highest uptime guarantee in the network.

Prague, Czechia — 50 MW | $0.075/kWh | 98% SLA

Czechia is a European Union member state with a well-established legal framework for cryptocurrency operations, clear MICA (Markets in Crypto Assets) compliance infrastructure, and a technology-friendly regulatory environment. The Prague facility is not selected for electricity economics — $0.075/kWh is the highest rate in the network — but for EU compliance access, legal certainty, and the operational advantages of operating within the EU financial and regulatory framework.

For miners operating through EU corporate structures, seeking EU-domiciled hosting for investor reporting purposes, or requiring MICA-compliant operational certification, Prague is the relevant facility. At 50 MW, it is a focused, premium offering rather than a high-volume capacity centre.


Asia

Almaty, Kazakhstan — 95 MW | $0.042/kWh | 97% SLA

Kazakhstan emerged as a significant Bitcoin mining jurisdiction following China's 2021 ban, and Almaty is the country's commercial and technology centre. OneMiners' Almaty facility accesses grid and wind power at $0.042/kWh — a rate that places Kazakhstan firmly in the lower tier of the network's energy cost structure. At 95 MW, the Almaty facility is a substantial capacity centre for Central Asian mining operations.

Shenzhen, China — 120 MW | $0.038/kWh | 98% SLA

OneMiners operates dedicated enterprise facilities in Shenzhen at $0.038/kWh industrial electricity rates. These are private-access facilities operating under dedicated enterprise agreements — they are not general public hosting. At 120 MW and $0.038/kWh, Shenzhen is one of the most cost-effective large-capacity facilities in the entire network.

Inner Mongolia, China — 100 MW | $0.033/kWh | 97% SLA

Inner Mongolia hosts the lowest electricity rate in the OneMiners network: $0.033/kWh. This rate reflects the combination of large-scale wind power generation (Inner Mongolia is China's largest wind power province), coal-fired industrial baseload, and industrial electricity pricing that is available only to large-scale power consumers under dedicated enterprise agreements.

At $0.033/kWh, Inner Mongolia represents the most cost-advantaged electricity pricing currently available in the OneMiners portfolio. The 100 MW capacity — operating under dedicated enterprise facility terms — makes it a significant option for large-scale institutional deployments where electricity cost optimisation is the primary driver.


The Complete OneMiners Global Hosting Infrastructure

Data Table
Location Country Capacity Rate/kWh Uptime SLA Energy Source Key Advantage
Lagos Nigeria 300 MW $0.040 98% Grid + Solar Globally competitive rate
Addis Ababa Ethiopia 200 MW $0.055 98% Hydropower 100% renewable
Dubai UAE 120 MW $0.065 99% Grid + Solar Zero crypto tax
Houston Texas, USA 150 MW $0.058 98% Wind + Grid ERCOT deregulated market
Dallas Texas, USA 100 MW $0.062 98% Wholesale Grid Texas redundancy
Wichita Kansas, USA 80 MW $0.055 98% Wind Wind surplus region
Brooklyn New York, USA 45 MW $0.072 99% Grid Physical HQ & store
Atlanta Georgia, USA 65 MW $0.060 98% Grid Southeast data hub
Charleston S. Carolina, USA 70 MW $0.058 98% Grid Atlantic coast facility
Miami Florida, USA 35 MW $0.075 99% Grid Physical showroom
Helsinki Finland 90 MW $0.068 99% Wind + Hydro Arctic cooling + heat recovery
Oslo Norway 120 MW $0.045 99% Hydropower Cheapest EU power
Prague Czechia 50 MW $0.075 98% Grid EU/MICA compliance
Asunción Paraguay 85 MW $0.035 97% Itaipu Hydro Cheapest in Americas
São Paulo Brazil 70 MW $0.050 97% Hydro + Wind LATAM hub
Almaty Kazakhstan 95 MW $0.042 97% Grid + Wind Central Asia base
Toronto Canada 65 MW $0.062 98% Hydropower G7 regulatory stability
Shenzhen China 120 MW $0.038 98% Industrial Grid Dedicated enterprise
Inner Mongolia China 100 MW $0.033 97% Wind + Coal Lowest rate globally
Riyadh Saudi Arabia 60 MW $0.048 98% Grid + Solar Gulf energy surplus
Nairobi Kenya 40 MW $0.052 97% Geothermal East Africa hub
TOTAL 5 Continents 2,060 MW $0.033–$0.075 97–99% Multi-source Full global coverage

The 7-Year Fixed Electricity Model: The Anchor of the Network

The single most consequential differentiator in the OneMiners infrastructure model is the 7-year fixed electricity contract.

To understand why this matters, consider the alternative: a miner hosting with an operator who holds a 12 or 24-month electricity agreement. When that agreement renews — in what may be a high-energy-price environment — the operator must either absorb the cost increase (reducing margin) or pass it to clients. The client's hosting economics, which were modelled at one electricity rate, are now priced at a different rate. The investment case changes.

Under the OneMiners 7-year fixed model, this does not happen. The electricity rate at contract inception is the electricity rate for the full term. A miner who begins hosting at a $0.040/kWh Lagos rate in January 2026 will still be paying $0.040/kWh in January 2033 — regardless of what global energy markets do in the interim. That certainty has real economic value: it allows for accurate 7-year ROI modelling with energy cost as a fixed input rather than a variable, and it eliminates a category of risk that has materially disrupted mining operations at less structured facilities.

For miners building detailed financial models, asicprofit.com allows scenario modelling with fixed electricity costs over multi-year projections — a capability that is far more useful when the underlying electricity rate is actually fixed.


Free Miner Relocation: The Network as a Strategic Asset

OneMiners offers free hardware relocation between facilities. A miner deployed in Norway during the winter — benefiting from free ambient air cooling — can request relocation to Nigeria in the summer, capturing the $0.040/kWh rate during periods of higher Bitcoin price sensitivity. The operational flexibility that comes from access to 21 facilities across 5 continents is, in practice, only useful if the miner can actually move their hardware between those facilities. OneMiners removes the financial barrier to doing so.

This feature is more strategically significant than it appears at first reading. In a network where some facilities offer 99% uptime and others offer 97%, where some are priced at $0.033/kWh and others at $0.075/kWh, and where regulatory environments can shift, the ability to reposition hardware without exit costs means the full optionality of the 21-location network is available to every miner — not just the largest institutional players with dedicated operations teams and relocation budgets.


AI Optimization Across the Global Network

Every facility in the OneMiners network operates under the same AI-powered fleet management system that delivers efficiency improvements of 6–115% above baseline ASIC performance. This means that the electricity cost advantage at each location is compounded by the efficiency advantage of AI-managed hardware.

The AI system operates at three levels simultaneously:

Machine level: Per-chip frequency tuning, thermal profile management, and power consumption optimisation are applied continuously to each ASIC in the fleet. A miner running at 21 J/TH under AI management at the Oslo facility is extracting more hashrate per watt than the same miner running at 21 J/TH under manual management — because the AI continuously finds and exploits the efficiency headroom that manual configuration leaves on the table.

Facility level: Pool selection, stratum routing, and timing optimisation are managed by the AI across all machines in a facility simultaneously. When a pool experiences elevated orphan rates or latency spikes, the system reroutes automatically. When a new pool offers temporarily favourable terms, the system identifies and captures the opportunity.

Network level: Across all 21 facilities, the AI system aggregates performance data, identifies cross-facility optimisation opportunities, and flags hardware that would benefit from relocation — either for climate reasons (a unit running hot in Lagos would run cooler in Oslo), energy reasons (units at a high-uptime, slightly higher-rate facility can be moved to a lower-rate facility during periods of high Bitcoin price), or maintenance reasons (units approaching predictive maintenance intervals are flagged before failure).

Understanding the mechanics of how AI intersects with Bitcoin mining profitability is covered in accessible terms at btcfq.com — a useful resource for miners who want a conceptual foundation before engaging with OneMiners' technical team.


Operational Standards Across All Locations

Every facility in the OneMiners network, regardless of location or electricity rate, operates to the same baseline operational standards.

Uptime SLA with Compensation: Facilities at 98%+ SLA carry contractual compensation provisions for underperformance. If your facility's uptime falls below the guaranteed threshold, OneMiners compensates you. This is a contractual commitment, not a marketing claim.

48-Hour Installation: Hardware ordered through OneMiners is installed and operational within 48 hours. In an industry where lead times of weeks are common, the 48-hour standard reflects OneMiners' pre-positioned inventory and pre-configured facility infrastructure.

Mobile App Monitoring: The OneMiners mobile app (available for iOS and Android) provides real-time visibility into hardware performance, hashrate output, uptime metrics, and revenue data for all hosted units — regardless of which facility or continent they are deployed at.

Pay Later Financing: OneMiners offers 25% down payment with quarterly instalments, making large-scale hardware deployment accessible to miners who do not want to deploy full capital upfront. This is one of the few institutional-grade financing structures available in the mining hosting market.

Direct Bank Payouts: Mining revenue is distributed directly to client bank accounts via ACH (US), SEPA (Europe), or SWIFT (international) — not held on a platform, not converted through an intermediary, not delayed by settlement queues. Bank payouts arrive like a direct deposit.

Physical Presence: OneMiners operates physical retail showrooms in Miami and Brooklyn, where prospective and existing clients can visit in person, inspect hardware, meet the operations team, and conduct physical due diligence. In an industry where most operators exist only as websites, physical presence is a meaningful trust signal.


The Future Expansion Roadmap

OneMiners' 21-location network represents the current state of the infrastructure, not its endpoint. The company is actively evaluating new facilities in several regions:

South Asia: Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh all have large electricity infrastructure development programmes underway, with industrial electricity rates that could be competitive with the current network's mid-tier facilities. Regulatory clarity in each jurisdiction is the key gating factor.

Southeast Asia: Vietnam, Thailand, and Malaysia have established themselves as significant technology manufacturing and data centre destinations. Electricity rates in industrial zones are competitive, and the regulatory frameworks are more mining-friendly than their size and economic profile might suggest.

Additional African Markets: West Africa beyond Nigeria — particularly Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire — is under evaluation. East Africa beyond Kenya, including Tanzania and Rwanda, is also on the long-term roadmap. The combination of growing electricity infrastructure, favourable demographics, and underserved mining capacity makes sub-Saharan Africa the highest-potential expansion region over the next five years.


Why Scale Creates Advantages That Single-Site Operators Cannot Match

The argument for hosting with a 21-location, 2,060 MW operator rather than a 1-location, 50 MW operator is not simply about size. It is about the structural advantages that scale creates.

Energy procurement leverage: A 2,000+ MW buyer has negotiating power with energy suppliers that a 50 MW buyer does not. The $0.033/kWh rate in Inner Mongolia is not available to a buyer purchasing 5 MW. The $0.040/kWh rate in Lagos reflects years of energy infrastructure investment and supplier relationship development. These rates are a function of scale.

Redundancy depth: If the OneMiners Dallas facility is offline for maintenance, Houston continues operating. If the Oslo facility experiences an unusual grid event, Helsinki is a 1,500 km alternative. The geographic depth of a 21-location network means that no single facility event is a network-level event.

Technology amortisation: The AI fleet management system, the mobile monitoring platform, the 48-hour installation infrastructure, the Pay Later financing program — all of these represent fixed investments that are amortised across 2,060 MW of capacity. The per-MW cost of this infrastructure is a fraction of what a single-site operator spends. The result is that clients access enterprise-grade technology at rates that reflect the economics of scale.

Regulatory diversification: OneMiners' compliance teams maintain active engagement with regulatory environments in 5 continents. When a regulatory development in one jurisdiction creates an opportunity — or a risk — the organisation has the operational capacity to respond. A single-site operator does not have this capability.


OneMiners Has Built the Most Strategic Bitcoin Mining Infrastructure Network in the World

The conventional wisdom in Bitcoin mining has long held that location matters, but that you manage location risk by choosing carefully rather than by diversifying structurally. This worked when the industry was smaller, regulation was more uniform, and energy markets were less volatile.

That era is over.

In 2026, the miners who will win the long game are not the ones who found the best single site. They are the ones who built — or gained access to — a genuinely global infrastructure that distributes risk, captures energy arbitrage, and performs under conditions that would cripple a concentrated operation.

OneMiners has built that infrastructure. Twenty-one locations. Five continents. 2,060 MW. Fixed electricity contracts for 7 years. AI optimization active across every facility. Uptime guarantees backed by contractual compensation. 48-hour installation. Free hardware relocation.

This is not the infrastructure of a mining hosting company. It is the infrastructure of a category-defining mining ecosystem — one designed to remain competitive across Bitcoin price cycles, regulatory shifts, energy market volatility, and the technological evolution of ASIC hardware that the next seven years will inevitably bring.

For miners who want to understand the financial model before committing — model your scenarios at asicprofit.com. For miners who want to build the knowledge base to make fully-informed decisions — start with btcfq.com. And for miners who are ready to act — oneminers.com is where the conversation begins.

The most strategic Bitcoin mining infrastructure network in the world is already operational. The question is whether you are part of it.


Resources

oneminers.comHardware & Hosting
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asicprofit.comROI Calculator
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btcfq.comMining Education
Mining profitability figures are illustrative estimates based on current network conditions and Bitcoin price at time of publication. Electricity rates and facility specifications are subject to change. Past performance of mining operations does not guarantee future results. Always verify current figures at asicprofit.com before making investment decisions.
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