#BTCMiningMachines #EcoFriendlyCrypto
The manufacturing of hardware for Bitcoin mining in the United States is booming, driven by the growing demand for ASICs from the U.S. company Auradine, which has gained ground as a local alternative to the Asian giants, and by mining in the U.S., which is accelerating infrastructure development, thanks to Chinese companies relocating to the country to limit the impact of Trump's tariff policies.
In this sense, a recent announcement from Canaan, a Chinese company that has successfully completed a pilot production of mining hardware in the U.S., suggests that it seeks to protect itself from the tariff policies imposed by Donald Trump. Canaan also decided to focus on the sale of equipment and its own Bitcoin mining operations, abandoning its artificial intelligence (AI) semiconductor unit.
MicroBT and Bitmain, the other two most important ASIC manufacturers in the world, are also in the process of relocating or creating some operational bases in the North American country.
For its part, the mining company Genesis Digital Assets (GDA) acquired an order for 1,000 ASICs from the Teraflux line of the U.S. hardware manufacturer Auradine. These devices will be installed in the 40 MW data center in Glasscock, Texas, owned by GDA, according to a statement from June 23.
The Teraflux ASICs purchased by GDA belong to the air-cooled AT2880 model, which was designed to operate with dynamic performance.
In normal mode, the AT2880 offers 180 TH/s (terahashes per second) of computational power (or hashrate), while in turbo mode it reaches up to 260 TH/s, adapting to the operator's needs.
The acquisition of 1,000 ASICs by GDA adds to the trend of adopting U.S. hardware, as reported by CriptoNoticias, following the announcement from MARA (MARA), the publicly traded Bitcoin mining company with the largest market capitalization in the world, which allocated nearly half of its ASIC orders for 2025 to Auradine.