HIVE digital Signs $220M Sovereign AI GPU Deal with Bell Canada
TL;DR
- HIVE’s BUZZ HPC has entered into a three-year, cloud sovereign GPU AI technology contract valued at approximately $220 million.
- The agreement brings together Bell AI Fabric, Cohere, Hypertec and BUZZ HPC as part of Canada’s AI computing infrastructure.
- HIVE says once fully implemented, the contract is expected to augment annual recurring revenue by approximately $70 million.
- The move shows how public Bitcoin miners are increasingly leaning towards artificial intelligence and high-performance processing as the economics of mining become more competitive.
Bitcoin Miner delves deeper into AI calculations
HIVE Digital Technologies has moved deeper into the AI infrastructure market after its subsidiary BUZZ HPC closed a three-year contract for sovereign GPU AI technology associated with Bell AI Fabric and Cohere. The deal, worth around $220 million, gives the former pure-play Bitcoin miner another gigantic non-mining revenue stream at a time when miners are still adjusting to a weaker post-halving economy.
According to HIVE, the project will include 2,304 NVIDIA Grace Blackwell GPUs, and BUZZ HPC will work with Bell Canada, Cohere and Hypertec to build Canada’s sovereign AI stack. The company said the deal is expected to provide annual recurring revenue of approximately $70 million once implementation is completed.
Why the contract matters to miners
The heading number is crucial, but the more crucial point is strategic. Public miners have spent the last two years trying to show investors that their power contracts, data center sizes and technical teams can do more than just produce Bitcoin blocks. Artificial intelligence and high-performance computing have emerged as the clearest adjacent market because the same broad infrastructure base – power, cooling, infrastructure and operations – can be transferred to compute-intensive enterprise customers.
This does not mean that AI exploration and computation are interchangeable. ASIC mining facilities and GPU cloud infrastructure require different hardware, clients, and service standards. However, the direction is clear: miners with access to affordable energy and scalable locations are increasingly trying to turn these assets into more predictable sources of revenue.
Canada’s sovereign AI corner
The Canadian structure also matters. Bell AI Fabric, Cohere, Hypertec and BUZZ HPC are presenting the transaction as part of a national sovereign AI project, which means computing power, connectivity and model development are to remain within Canadian infrastructure. This topic has gained importance around the world as companies and governments seek artificial intelligence systems that meet local data, privacy and national security requirements.
For HIVE, the opportunity is to move from a cyclical narrative about Bitcoin mining to a broader story about digital infrastructure. If the company can pull this off, the market may begin to value part of the business based on recurring enterprise cloud revenues, rather than just hash price, Bitcoin price and mining margins.
The risk is execution
The obvious caveat is that AI infrastructure is not a free upgrade path. GPU procurement, uptime commitments, customer concentration and capital intensity create recent risks. The $220 million headline figure is significant, but investors will still want to see how the implementation timeline, margin profile and customer economics translate into real-world results.
Still, this is exactly the type of deal miners are looking for: gigantic, contracted revenues targeted at enterprises, tied to infrastructure they can reliably operate. It also gives HIVE a clearer answer to the question facing the entire mining sector: What else can these sites do as Bitcoin mining itself becomes more hard to scale profitably?
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.
