š» No hype. No price calls. Just honest analysis from an operator mining since 2019.
ā«ļøĀ Review the free guideĀ if youāre reassessing your mining setup.
ā«ļøĀ Subscribe for freeĀ to get new insights in your inbox.
š Table of Contents
1.Ā The Competition Has Shifted
2.Ā Why AI Workloads Win on Reliable Power
3.Ā Where Independents Still Fit
4.Ā Post-Halving Pressure Makes It Real
5.Ā The Operator Takeaway
š The Competition Has Shifted
Written from a pool minerās perspective.
For most of Bitcoinās existence, miner competition mostly came down to hash rate and hardware. If you had efficient machines and cheap power, you could stay in the game. That still matters, but now miners are competing with a different kind of buyer.Ā AI data centersĀ that need large, reliable power contracts and the infrastructure that comes with them.
This is not a small shift. In April 2026,Ā Anthropic announced a new agreement with Google and BroadcomĀ for multiple gigawatts of next-generation compute.
š Why AI Workloads Win on Reliable Power
AI workloads can often justify higher value, more predictable power contracts. They need electricity that is reliable and available around the clock, which makes them attractive to utilities and infrastructure owners. Reuters reported thatĀ U.S. power use is set to hit record highs in 2026 and 2027 as AI demand surges, which is the kind of backdrop that favors firm-load customers.
That shows up in the real world as tighter negotiations, fewer surplus contracts, or higher baseline rates for everyone else trying to secure electricity.
š Where Independents Still Fit
Independent minersĀ are not usually competing for the same deals. They are not bidding on massive grid connections or negotiating hyperscale contracts. They operate in a different layer of the energy landscape, and that layer still exists.
Behind-the-meter setups, stranded or curtailed renewables, flare gas, seasonal power, and heat-reuse sitesĀ are the kinds of places where Bitcoin can still make sense.
AĀ hyperscalerĀ is not building next to a flared gas well or trying to monetize a small industrial heat source in a cold climate. The power profiles are too small, too variable, or too remote.
That is where independent mining still has room to work:Ā not by competing for the same electrons as AI, but by using the energy that larger loads cannot, or will not, take. The EIA estimates thatĀ U.S. cryptocurrency mining accounts for roughly 0.6% to 2.3% of total electricity consumptionĀ ā a useful reminder that mining is still material but not the dominant electricity story.
UnderstandingĀ how each profitability variable interactsĀ is what separates operators who survive in these niches from those who do not.
š Post-Halving Pressure Makes It Real
This is happening against a difficult post-halving backdrop. The April 2024 halving cut the block reward to 3.125 BTC. By 2026, miner revenue has remained under pressure, andĀ hashprice is hovering in the low-$30s per PH/s/day, which is exactly why efficiency matters more than ever.
That makes the practical side of mining matter even more. Every cent per kilowatt-hour matters. Every hour of uptime counts. Machine efficiency is no longer a talking point;Ā it is the difference between breakeven and running negative.
From where I sit, running firmware thatĀ squeezes better efficiency out of existing hardwareĀ is not optional anymore. It tends to matter most on older machines, where the gains from tuning can be meaningful.
Newer factory-fresh miners are often already efficient out of the box, so the upside is usually smaller, but firmware can still help with fine-tuning, stability, and how a machine behaves under real operating conditions.
I still mine pure Bitcoin for the most part ā no AI pivot, no hybrid hosting required ā and the results fromĀ pairing good firmware with disciplined operationsĀ continue to be satisfying. But that only works because myĀ power rate and the efficiencyĀ are both where they need to be.
š The Operator Takeaway
None of this means independent mining is over. The network still needs hash rate, and it does not care whether it comes from a 500-megawatt facility or a garage with three machines.Ā ButĀ the environment around mining is changing in ways that reward operational discipline and access to cheap power.
For independent miners, success now seemingly depends more on how power is managed than on how much hardware is owned.
Want to go deeper on how AI is reshaping mining economics?
1ļøā£ ReadĀ AI Isnāt Replacing Bitcoin Mining ā Itās Outbidding It for PowerĀ for a deeper look at how AI data centers are reshaping miner access to cheap electricity.
2ļøā£ ReadĀ AI Pivot vs Mining DifficultyĀ for how the shift toward AI workloads feeds directly into difficulty and what it means for margins.
3ļøā£ ReadĀ How Much Does It Cost to Mine 1 Bitcoin?Ā for the real all-in cost at three different electricity rates.
ā¶ļø Looking to upgrade your operation?Ā Altair Technology,Ā ASIC Marketplace, andĀ OneMinersĀ carry the hardware serious miners are actually running. For ASIC hardware tools and accessories,Ā AmazonĀ is a reliable source.
ā¶ļø Need a hardware wallet? TheĀ Tangem walletĀ is a simple, card-format option for self-custody. Use codeĀ GPEBZYĀ for 10% off.
ā Subscribe for Weekly Bitcoin Mining Insights
I publish weekly operator breakdowns on mining economics, fee markets, and Bitcoin fundamentals. No hype, no price calls ā just hands-on analysis from an operator mining since 2019.Ā Subscribe nowĀ to receive access straight to your inbox.
ā«Ā X:Ā @OrngeHorizonBTC
šµĀ Bluesky:Ā @orngehorizonbtc.bsky.social
š”Ā Medium:Ā medium@OrngeHorizonBTC
šĀ Website:Ā orangehorizonbtc.com