Oman’s Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technology unveiled Omanhash.om on June 17, 2026, making it the official and sole legal Bitcoin mining pool for every licensed crypto mining company operating in the country. Participation isn’t optional. Every Omani-licensed miner must route their hashrate through Omanhash rather than connecting to international pools like Foundry, AntPool, or F2Pool.
The launch makes Oman the second nation after Kazakhstan to formally adopt a sovereign mining pool model. The initial phase targets approximately 10 exahashes per second (EH/s), which would immediately place Omanhash among the larger mining pools globally. Enegix Global, the same company that built and operates Kazakhstan’s btcpool.kz, supplied the technology platform and liquidity infrastructure. Local operations are managed by Frontier Technologies LLC, an Omani blockchain firm based in Muscat.
The state-backed model carries implications that go beyond Oman’s specific market. The fact that two sovereign nations have now adopted essentially the same mandatory mining pool structure suggests that other petro-states with substantial mining infrastructure may follow. For Bitcoin’s broader network, the growing share of hashrate flowing through state-controlled pools introduces governance dynamics that didn’t exist a few years ago.
What Omanhash Actually Does
The Omanhash architecture gives the Omani government direct visibility into every aspect of national Bitcoin mining operations. Hashrate contributions, revenue generation, energy consumption, and newly minted Bitcoin all flow through a single chokepoint that authorities can monitor in real time.
The structure mirrors the Kazakhstan model that Enegix established in 2023. Under Kazakhstan’s digital assets law, licensed miners must report earnings to tax authorities through an automated system integrated directly with the state-accredited mining pool. Tax compliance isn’t a separate process. It happens automatically as part of normal mining operations.
For Oman, the parallel system means licensed miners essentially can’t operate without government visibility into their economic activity. Revenue tracking, regulatory compliance, and tax assessment all become natural byproducts of using the mandatory pool. The administrative burden on individual miners may actually decrease compared to international pool usage because compliance happens automatically.
Enegix Global’s combined operations now span three sovereign mining pools totalling approximately 25 EH/s. The company has stated a target of 30 EH/s across its sovereign pool network. No other operator has delivered multiple state-level mining pool projects at this scale. Enegix’s position as the de facto vendor for sovereign mining pool implementations gives it significant strategic positioning as more nations consider similar models.
The $700 Million Infrastructure Investment
Omanhash isn’t a standalone project. It’s the regulatory layer on top of a national mining infrastructure investment exceeding $700 million that has been building since 2022.
The Salalah Free Zone has been the centerpiece of Oman’s mining strategy. The southern port city offers strategic advantages including available power infrastructure, cooler climate zones than other Gulf locations, and integration with Oman’s broader Vision 2040 economic diversification plan. Major mining projects in the zone include a 150 MW facility using hydro-cooling technology, providing more efficient heat management than air-cooled alternatives in the regional climate.
Oman’s hashrate has grown to approximately 30 EH/s, representing roughly 3% of Bitcoin’s global network hashrate according to Q2 2026 data from Hashrate Index. For context, that’s larger than the entire Bitcoin mining capacity of most European countries combined. Oman has transformed from a marginal mining jurisdiction to a meaningful contributor to Bitcoin’s global network in just four years.
The infrastructure investment aligns with broader Omani economic strategy. Vision 2040 explicitly targets reducing the country’s dependence on petroleum revenues. Bitcoin mining provides one pathway toward that diversification by converting Oman’s energy abundance into digital assets that aren’t subject to the same commodity price dynamics as oil exports. The strategic logic is similar to what motivated Kazakhstan’s mining expansion: monetise excess energy capacity through Bitcoin mining rather than through traditional electricity exports.
Why the State-Pool Model Matters
The sovereign mining pool model represents a meaningfully different approach to Bitcoin mining regulation than what most jurisdictions have adopted.
Most countries with significant mining activity, including the United States, Canada, Russia, and various European nations, regulate mining at the operator level. Mining companies must comply with energy regulations, tax requirements, and various other rules, but they’re free to choose which mining pools they connect to. The pool choice affects how miners earn rewards (variance, fee structure, payout method) but doesn’t directly affect regulatory compliance.
The sovereign pool model collapses these previously separate decisions into a single mandatory choice. Miners can choose to operate in Oman or not. If they choose to operate in Oman, they must use Omanhash. The pool selection itself becomes the regulatory compliance mechanism. The model is simultaneously more restrictive (miners lose pool choice) and potentially more efficient (compliance happens automatically rather than through separate reporting processes).
For Oman, the model provides several specific benefits. Tax assessment becomes more accurate because revenue tracking happens at the protocol level rather than relying on self-reported figures. Energy consumption visibility supports better resource planning. The government can identify mining operations that might attempt to circumvent licensing requirements because all legitimate miners must connect to the recognised pool.
For miners, the costs include loss of pool choice flexibility, potential exposure to government decisions about mining policy that could affect operations, and dependency on the technical reliability of the state-mandated infrastructure. The benefits include simplified compliance, integration with national support infrastructure, and the legitimacy that comes from operating within a formally recognised framework.
For the broader Bitcoin network, the implications are more complex. As more hashrate flows through sovereign-controlled pools, the network’s underlying assumption of decentralised mining gets tested in new ways. State-backed pools could theoretically coordinate in ways that smaller commercial pools couldn’t, raising questions about mining centralisation that the Bitcoin community has debated for years.
What This Signals for Other Nations
Oman’s adoption of the Kazakhstan model suggests this approach may spread to other countries with substantial mining infrastructure.
The Gulf region contains several countries with similar economic characteristics to Oman: abundant energy resources, diversification ambitions, and growing interest in Bitcoin mining as a strategic industry. The UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar all have mining sectors that could potentially adopt sovereign pool models. Whether they do depends on their specific regulatory philosophies, but Oman’s precedent makes the path easier to follow.
Beyond the Gulf, other nations with significant mining footprints could consider similar models. Russia, Iran (despite sanctions complications), Venezuela, and various Central Asian states all have established mining sectors operating under varying regulatory frameworks. A sovereign pool approach could provide these governments with better visibility and control over their mining sectors while supporting the kind of energy-monetisation strategy that motivates much of the mining activity.
The United States, Canada, and most European nations are unlikely to adopt mandatory sovereign pools given their different regulatory philosophies and the strong cultural preference for mining decentralisation in those markets. But the precedent matters even for jurisdictions that don’t directly adopt it. The legitimacy of state-backed mining pools as a regulatory model normalises a specific approach to Bitcoin mining oversight that previously didn’t exist.
Enegix Global’s positioning as the leading vendor for sovereign pool implementations matters for understanding how this model scales. The company has now delivered two such projects (Kazakhstan and Oman) and is positioning for additional contracts. The vendor concentration creates both opportunities (operational expertise, integrated systems) and risks (dependency on a single vendor for critical national infrastructure) that future adopters will need to evaluate.
The Broader Context
The Omanhash launch arrives during a period of significant pressure on Bitcoin mining economics globally. Bitcoin’s price decline from $126,200 to current $62,201 levels has compressed mining revenues. Approximately 20% of publicly traded miners are now unprofitable at current prices. Publicly traded miners sold more than 32,000 Bitcoin in Q1 2026 alone, more than they offloaded in all of 2025.
The economic pressure on miners creates conditions where alternative organisational models become more attractive. State-backed pools that provide regulatory certainty and integration with national infrastructure may help miners survive periods that would force purely commercial operations into bankruptcy. The Omani government’s $700 million infrastructure investment provides direct economic support that international mining pools simply can’t match.
For Bitcoin’s long-term security model, the growing share of state-controlled hashrate raises questions that will need addressing as the network matures. Bitcoin’s design assumes that no single entity can coordinate enough hashrate to threaten network integrity. The model works fine when hashrate is distributed across thousands of operators worldwide. As state-controlled pools accumulate larger shares of total hashrate, the assumptions underlying network security need ongoing examination.
For now, Omanhash represents the latest data point in Bitcoin mining’s gradual institutionalisation. The era of purely commercial, geographically distributed mining is giving way to a more complex landscape where sovereign nations actively shape mining infrastructure through direct policy intervention. Whether this trajectory benefits Bitcoin’s long-term decentralisation or constrains it remains an open question. The next several years will provide the answer.
FAQ
What is Omanhash?
Omanhash.om is a state-backed Bitcoin mining pool launched by Oman’s Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technology on June 17, 2026. It’s the official and sole legal mining pool for every licensed Bitcoin mining company operating in Oman. Participation is mandatory. The pool targets approximately 10 exahashes per second (EH/s) in its initial phase, with technology and liquidity provided by Enegix Global and local operations managed by Frontier Technologies LLC.
Why does this matter for Bitcoin?
Oman becomes the second nation after Kazakhstan to formally adopt a sovereign mining pool model. The trend toward state-backed mining pools represents a meaningful shift in how Bitcoin mining is regulated and operated. As more hashrate flows through sovereign-controlled pools, questions about mining centralisation and network security gain new dimensions. Oman currently controls approximately 3% of global Bitcoin network hashrate, with over $700 million invested in mining infrastructure since 2022.
Will other countries follow Oman’s example?
Likely yes, particularly in the Gulf region and among other nations with significant energy resources and mining ambitions. The UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Russia, and various Central Asian states all have established mining sectors that could potentially adopt similar models. Enegix Global’s position as the leading vendor for sovereign pool implementations (with Kazakhstan and now Oman as references) positions the company for additional contracts. The United States, Canada, and most European nations are unlikely to adopt mandatory sovereign pools given different regulatory philosophies.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.


















