The 15-year agreement anchors Hut 8’s shift toward long-duration AI infrastructure revenue as hyperscalers seek power-first compute capacity.

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Bitcoin mining company Hut 8 signed a 15-year, $7 billion lease to deliver 245 megawatts of artificial intelligence data center capacity at its River Bend campus in Louisiana, marking one of the biggest infrastructure agreements between a crypto-native company and hyperscale AI demand.
Hut 8 on Wednesday that infrastructure provider Fluidstack will lease the capacity, while Google will provide a financial backstop covering lease payments and related obligations over the 15-year base term. This means that Google will cover the payments if Fluidstack is unable to pay the costs.
“River Bend reflects the strength of Hut 8’s power-first, innovation-driven development model, validated by the world-class counterparties we are executing alongside,” said Hut 8 CEO Asher Genoot, adding that the agreement was a result of disciplined and patient execution.
The company said initial construction was already underway, with the first data hall scheduled for completion and commissioning in the second quarter of 2027. Additional data halls are expected to come online over the next year.

Google backstop and institutional financing de-risk lease delivery
A defining feature of the deal is Google’s role as a financial backstop, covering both pass-through obligations and lease payments during the base term.
Hut 8 and Fluidstack are also expected to execute an operations services agreement for ongoing data center management, backed by an additional payment guarantee from Google.
The project will be financed using loans tied directly to the data center, with major banks expected to cover most of the construction cost, reducing the amount of capital Hut 8 needs to invest upfront.
“River Bend demonstrates how, when Hut 8 brings together innovative thinking, an aligned team, and institutional discipline, it translates into real, enduring value,” said Noah Wintroub, global chairman of investment banking at JPMorgan Chase.
The agreement deepens Hut 8’s involvement in the AI sector, which started in 2024. In September 2024, Hut 8 through its new subsidiary, Highrise AI. With the pivot, Hut 8 deployed over 1,000 Nvidia H100 GPUs to drive its cloud-based AI compute services.
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Crypto-native firms to earn billions in the AI sector
In June, Core Scientific with AI cloud provider CoreWeave to rent out its infrastructure over a 12-year term. The deal is expected to generate an annual revenue of $290 million for Core Scientific.
In August, Galaxy Digital of its Helios AI data center in Texas after securing a $1.4 billion loan that will cover about 80% of the project’s construction costs.
AI infrastructure firm CoreWeave also signed a 15-year agreement to lease power, cooling and physical data center infrastructure from Galaxy Digital to support its AI and high-performance computing operations. The deal is expected to generate about $1 billion in annual revenue for Galaxy
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