A massive AI-focused data infrastructure project in Texas is accelerating as CleanSpark, a major player in digital infrastructure and energy deployment, secures significant new power capacity for a rapidly expanding site. Although the development is centered outside Houston, it represents another major step in Texas’ growing role as a national hub for high-density computing, artificial intelligence workloads, and large-scale energy-backed digital operations.
CleanSpark’s latest acquisition brings the total energy capacity at its Texas site close to one gigawatt. This level of power places the facility among the largest AI-oriented data and compute hubs in the United States. The company stated that this expansion will support advanced computing applications, from data model training to high-performance energy systems, all of which require immense electrical resources.
Texas has emerged as one of the fastest-growing regions for energy-intensive digital infrastructure due to its competitive power market and large availability of land and energy resources. The state’s grid structure gives operators the ability to negotiate long-term power agreements, which remains a key factor in attracting companies like CleanSpark.
This expansion follows a series of power procurement deals the company has completed over the past year. Its ability to secure such large volumes of energy has positioned CleanSpark as a notable force in the ongoing race to establish AI computing capacity nationwide.
For Houston, a city tied closely to both energy leadership and technological innovation, developments like this highlight changing dynamics across the broader Texas economy. AI infrastructure relies heavily on robust energy systems—a field where Houston companies and researchers continue to shape the future of grid resilience, load balancing, and renewable integration.
The growth of AI data hubs is expected to influence energy demand planning, investment in grid modernization, and regional economic development across Texas. As more organizations compete for power-hungry AI workloads, the state’s energy market is set to play an even larger role in national tech strategy.
While CleanSpark’s project is not located within Houston city limits, its scale reflects a trend that directly intersects with Houston’s strengths. The region’s longstanding expertise in energy infrastructure, coupled with its growing technology ecosystem, may create new opportunities for collaboration, research, and commercial ventures.
CleanSpark is expected to continue expanding its Texas capacity throughout 2025 and 2026, with industry analysts watching closely as more AI and compute-focused companies seek long-term energy access. The company has not announced an operational date for the full gigawatt-scale site, but early phases are already underway.
This article is a summary of reporting by Stock Titan. Read the full story here.
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