Business Description
Global Hash Group, founded in 2021, provides Bitcoin mining infrastructure, ASIC hardware procurement, and repair services across Paraguay, Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay, positioning itself as one of Latin America's vertically integrated Bitcoin mining service platforms.
The company's service portfolio covers four operational lines. Its infrastructure arm operates facilities under a unified management protocol: one operations team and standardized procedures across all sites. Clients receive hosting, consulting, analytics, and equipment support under a single arrangement. Global Hash currently manages more than 6 MW of operational capacity across Paraguay and Brazil, with approximately 5,000 devices under 24/7 monitoring. The company is actively scaling toward a stated target of over 100 MW, citing sustained regional demand for sustainable Bitcoin mining infrastructure.
The ASIC procurement division covers the full hardware supply chain (sourcing, logistics, and delivery), with an inventory of current-generation models targeted at miners operating throughout Latin America. The service draws on logistics expertise built through the company's backing in international trade and business operations, and extends to deployment support for mining operations across any country in the region.
On the repair side, Global Hash holds the designation of the only MicroBT-authorized WhatsMiner service center in Latin America. The repair facility deploys trained technicians with manufacturer-specified tooling to diagnose and service WhatsMiner ASIC units for clients across the continent, eliminating the need for operators to ship hardware internationally for manufacturer-standard repairs.
The company's energy strategy prioritizes stranded and renewable sources, with a focus on surplus hydroelectric power in Paraguay and Brazil. Global Hash positions itself within what it describes as the region's "energy transformation ecosystem," converting otherwise curtailed hydroelectric generation into productive Bitcoin mining output. That model has drawn several publicly listed miners to Paraguay's low-cost power market in recent years.
Each Global Hash facility is structured as a long-term asset rather than a temporary deployment, with capacity expansion built to scale fast and cost-effectively as client equipment fleets grow. Client onboarding follows a documented five-step process: initial consultation, commercial proposal, optional site visit, contract signing, and launch, with monitoring and reporting beginning from day one of operations.
With active capacity in Paraguay and Brazil and a 100 MW expansion in progress, Global Hash Group is pursuing broader geographic coverage across Latin America while maintaining its sole MicroBT-authorized WhatsMiner repair center status in the region.