Hive Digital, a firm best known for its cryptocurrency operations, has quietly taken a significant step toward Canada’s AI infrastructure future. The company confirmed it has acquired a 7.2MW data center in Toronto, marking its first major facility dedicated to high-performance computing (HPC) and artificial intelligence workloads.
Details surrounding the seller and full terms remain under wraps, but the move is already drawing attention for what it signals. This isn’t just about more hardware. Through its subsidiary Buzz High Performance Computing Inc., Hive is setting the stage to host large-scale AI training and inference workloads with Canadian data residency baked in. After the upgrade, the facility will support up to 5,000 GPUs and focus on liquid-cooled systems designed for intensive compute workloads.
Toronto’s role in this strategy is no accident. It’s home to a dense fiber backbone, multiple AI research hubs, and a steady pipeline of technical talent. By planting its HPC flag there, Hive aims to position itself as a local infrastructure player in an industry still dominated by international hyperscalers.
Buzz HPC currently operates just over 2MW between Sweden and Montreal, but the company clearly plans a deeper push with the Toronto site. With recent cancellations of cloud contracts in Iceland and scrapped expansion plans in Norway, Hive appears to be recalibrating. This move aligns with that shift: away from scattered global mining assets and toward more centralized, vertically integrated compute hubs.
The company’s pivot may not generate the buzz of its crypto days, but it speaks to something quieter and possibly more enduring. Infrastructure, after all, doesn’t move fast. It stays and grows.
