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Google and SpaceX eye orbital AI data centers

07:50
By: Dakir Madiha
Google and SpaceX eye orbital AI data centers

Google and SpaceX, alongside other tech pioneers, are advancing plans to build AI data centers in orbit. This bold initiative aims to meet artificial intelligence's voracious energy demands while sidestepping earthly limitations like power grids and land scarcity.

In November, Google unveiled Project Suncatcher, scheduling two prototype satellites for early 2027 launch. These will test AI hardware powered by uninterrupted solar energy. CEO Sundar Pichai told Fox News that extraterrestrial data centers will become routine within a decade. Meanwhile, startup Starcloud made headlines in December by training Google's Gemma AI model aboard a satellite—the first large language model to operate in space.

SpaceX confirmed in December its preparations for a potential 2026 initial public offering, eyeing over $30 billion in funds. Chief financial officer Bret Johnsen said proceeds would fuel space-based AI data centers. Valued at $800 billion, the company positions itself as a leader in orbital computing infrastructure. Tesla CEO Elon Musk asserted that space data centers will offer the cheapest AI training method within five years.

The drive to space stems from mounting strain on ground infrastructure. OpenAI pledges around $1.4 trillion for data centers over the next eight years, while Microsoft allocates about $80 billion for fiscal 2025, more than half in the United States. Meta, Amazon, and fellow giants are pouring hundreds of billions into terrestrial facilities that tax electricity networks and water supplies.

Orbital centers promise near-constant solar power and avoid land-use disputes, yet hurdles loom large. Launch costs hover at roughly $2,000 per kilogram; experts say viability demands a drop to about $200 per kilogram. Cooling chips in vacuum, shielding from radiation, and managing orbital debris present further challenges.

Space debris risks sharpened in November when China's Shenzhou-20 spacecraft suffered window damage from a sub-millimeter fragment, prompting the first emergency crew evacuation in spaceflight history. About 130 million debris objects between 1mm and 1cm circle Earth, including at least 1 million larger pieces.

Nvidia-backed Starcloud plans its commercial Starcloud-2 satellite launch by late 2026, featuring a GPU cluster. Partnering with cloud provider Crusoe, it aims to deliver space-based computing services starting in 2027. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang have voiced support for the concept.



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