A year after Bitcoin’s 2024 halving, the mining landscape looks far less predictable.
Once dominated by a handful of giants, the industry is now seeing a wave of ambitious mid-tier companies closing in on the leaders – a shift that reflects how evenly the field has begun to balance.
Data cited by The Miner Mag indicates that firms such as Cipher Mining, Bitdeer, and HIVE Digital have expanded their operations aggressively, converting years of infrastructure investment into tangible onchain results. Their realized hashrate – a metric that measures actual mining output rather than theoretical capacity – has climbed fast enough to challenge the dominance of MARA Holdings, CleanSpark, and Cango.
The combined realized hashrate of the largest publicly traded miners hit roughly 326 EH/s in September, more than twice the level recorded a year ago. That collective strength now accounts for close to one-third of Bitcoin’s entire network power, a sign that industrial-scale mining has never been more concentrated – or competitive.
Yet the race to scale isn’t without cost. Research from VanEck shows that public miners have collectively taken on nearly $13 billion in debt, a sixfold increase since last year. Much of that borrowing is being funneled into new mining rigs, renewable power sources, and artificial intelligence hardware, as companies search for fresh revenue beyond Bitcoin itself.
Following the halving that reduced rewards to 3.125 BTC per block, the pressure to innovate has intensified. Some miners are experimenting with high-performance computing and AI hosting to counter slimmer margins, signaling that the mining business is evolving into something broader than pure crypto extraction.
The post-halving era has turned mining into a test of strategy rather than sheer scale – and the gap between the old guard and the new challengers is narrowing faster than anyone expected.




